ABSTRACT

The before-after-control-impact (BACI) sampling design is often used to assess the effects of an environmental change made at a known point in time, and was called the optimal impact study design by Green (1979). The basic idea is that one or more potentially impacted sites are sampled both before and after the time of the impact, and one or more control sites that cannot receive any impact are sampled at the same time. The assumption is that any naturally occurring changes will be about the same at the two types of sites, so that any extreme changes at the potentially impacted sites can be attributed to the impact. An example of this type of study is given in Example 1.4, where the chlorophyll concentration and other variables were measured on two lakes on a number of occasions from June 1984 to August 1986, with one of the lakes receiving a large experimental manipulation in the piscivore and planktivore composition in May 1985.