Page 3: Research news on watershed management

Watershed management, as a method, comprises integrated planning, implementation, and monitoring practices aimed at regulating hydrological processes and land–water interactions within a defined drainage basin to optimize ecosystem services and reduce degradation. Methodologically, it combines hydrological modeling, land-use planning, soil and water conservation measures (e.g., contour bunding, terracing, riparian buffers), and structural interventions such as check dams and retention basins. It employs participatory approaches and adaptive management, guided by quantitative indicators (runoff, sediment yield, nutrient loads, ecological status) to control erosion, enhance infiltration, stabilize streamflows, and maintain water quality within the watershed system.

Watershed sustainability project centers place-based research

The Xwulqw'selu Sta'lo' (Koksilah River) is a culturally important river to the Cowichan Tribes, located on traditional Quw'utsun land on Vancouver Island, British Columbia. The land, which was never ceded to Canada, is part ...

Climate inequity in natural flood management solutions

A new study co-authored by the University of Lincoln, U.K., reveals that competitive funding schemes designed to support nature-based solutions (NbS) for flood management may be unintentionally deepening inequalities—with ...

AI-enhanced maps reveal hidden streams for restoration

A dataset unveiled today more than doubles the documented stream miles in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, elevating the total from approximately 150,000 to nearly 350,000 miles. The Hyper-Resolution Hydrography Data used to ...

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