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Implications of legacy and lag effects for connecting watershed sediment yields to modeled field erosion, agricultural bmps, riparian buffers, and stream restoration, driftless area, Wisconsin

Dates

Year Conference
2010
Year
2010

Citation

Fitzpatrick, Faith A., Knox, James C., Hansis, Robert D., Good, Laura Ward, Panuska, John, Carvin, Rebecca, Lamba, Jasmeet, and Anonymous,, 2010, Implications of legacy and lag effects for connecting watershed sediment yields to modeled field erosion, agricultural bmps, riparian buffers, and stream restoration, driftless area, Wisconsin: v. 43, 449 p.

Summary

Much time and money has been spent over the last 40 years in the U.S. by farmers, soil scientists, hydrologists, geomorphologists, engineers, and ecologists attempting to document how agricultural best management practices, natural vegetation in riparian corridors, and stream rehabilitation or bank stabilization reduces sediment yields and improves ecological conditions at watershed outlets. These issues are especially pertinent in the steep erodible landscape of the Driftless Area in southwest Wisconsin, where many miles of world-class spring-fed trout streams remain on state impaired waters lists from excessive sedimentation and degraded habitat even though this area was the birthplace of the conservation movement 75 years ago. In [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northeast CASC

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Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
ISBN http://sciencebase.gov/vocab/identifierScheme 0016-7592
Year Conference http://sciencebase.gov/vocab/identifierScheme 2011

Citation Extension

citationTypeConference Proceedings
parts
typeVolume
value43
typePages
value449

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