News Blog test_2_news Image Are You Interested in Attending SWAF 2022? July 11, 2022 Read more Image SWCASC Fellow Named McGinnies Scholar! June 29, 2022 Read more Image Recordings from Native Nations and Climate Change Webinar Series Now Available! June 29, 2022 Read more Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 … Next › Next page Last » Last page test_1_blog Image Navigating Research as a Cohort Feb. 10, 2020 We live in a time of global change in which environmental issues are becoming increasingly evident. These issues are a culmination of complex and evolving interactions between organisms and their environment including human dimensions such as political, economic, and social realities/perceptions. Likewise, solutions to these environmental issues are complex, evolving, and multidisciplinary. This is important for all fields of study including my own dissertation research at the University of Arizona. I study stream ecology, specifically aquatic invertebrates in desert rivers that are fed by treated wastewater. The long-range goal of my research is to assess the potential of treated wastewater to support aquatic ecosystems to help buffer the impacts of climate change and population growth on these aridland systems, while also understanding the limitations of this artificial flow. Read more Image Atmospheric Rivers Cause Billions of Dollars in Flood Damage in the Western U.S. Jan. 13, 2020 Read more Image Science Co-Production and the Cohort Experience: Lessons from an NRWD Fellow Dec. 19, 2019 Read more Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
test_2_news Image Are You Interested in Attending SWAF 2022? July 11, 2022 Read more Image SWCASC Fellow Named McGinnies Scholar! June 29, 2022 Read more Image Recordings from Native Nations and Climate Change Webinar Series Now Available! June 29, 2022 Read more Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
Image Recordings from Native Nations and Climate Change Webinar Series Now Available! June 29, 2022 Read more
test_1_blog Image Navigating Research as a Cohort Feb. 10, 2020 We live in a time of global change in which environmental issues are becoming increasingly evident. These issues are a culmination of complex and evolving interactions between organisms and their environment including human dimensions such as political, economic, and social realities/perceptions. Likewise, solutions to these environmental issues are complex, evolving, and multidisciplinary. This is important for all fields of study including my own dissertation research at the University of Arizona. I study stream ecology, specifically aquatic invertebrates in desert rivers that are fed by treated wastewater. The long-range goal of my research is to assess the potential of treated wastewater to support aquatic ecosystems to help buffer the impacts of climate change and population growth on these aridland systems, while also understanding the limitations of this artificial flow. Read more Image Atmospheric Rivers Cause Billions of Dollars in Flood Damage in the Western U.S. Jan. 13, 2020 Read more Image Science Co-Production and the Cohort Experience: Lessons from an NRWD Fellow Dec. 19, 2019 Read more Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
Image Navigating Research as a Cohort Feb. 10, 2020 We live in a time of global change in which environmental issues are becoming increasingly evident. These issues are a culmination of complex and evolving interactions between organisms and their environment including human dimensions such as political, economic, and social realities/perceptions. Likewise, solutions to these environmental issues are complex, evolving, and multidisciplinary. This is important for all fields of study including my own dissertation research at the University of Arizona. I study stream ecology, specifically aquatic invertebrates in desert rivers that are fed by treated wastewater. The long-range goal of my research is to assess the potential of treated wastewater to support aquatic ecosystems to help buffer the impacts of climate change and population growth on these aridland systems, while also understanding the limitations of this artificial flow. Read more
Image Atmospheric Rivers Cause Billions of Dollars in Flood Damage in the Western U.S. Jan. 13, 2020 Read more
Image Science Co-Production and the Cohort Experience: Lessons from an NRWD Fellow Dec. 19, 2019 Read more