“…The networks focus on certain aspects of the environment such as the quality of the air, the surface water, the groundwater or the soil, the abundance of plant or animal species, biodiversity, abundance of ecologically important landscape elements such as hedgerows, etcetera. For instance, in the United States of America the Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) started in the late eighties of the previous century the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Programme (EMAP) (Messer et al 1991). The primary objective of EMAP is to estimate, with known confidence, the current status, extent, change and trends in indicators of the condition of the Nation's ecological resources -forests, arid lands, agroecosystems, wetlands, lakes, streams, Great Lakes, estuaries, and near-coastal systems.…”