Ten members of the Ecohydrology Research Group are presenting their research at the 59th Annual International Association of Great Lakes Research conference this week at the University of Guelph. The theme of the conference this year is “Integrating Across Disciplines and Scales”. Members of the group have organised three thematic sessions and are presenting six oral presentations and two poster presentations during the meeting.
Ecohydrology group members attending:
Tariq Aziz, Hans Durr, Joy Liu, Taylor Maavara, Chris Parsons, Christine Ridenour, Mahyar Shafii, Stephanie Slowinski, Avery To, Chris Wellen
Sessions chaired and co-chaired by group members:
- Nutrient speciation, sources and transport processes in Great Lakes watersheds (Part 1)
- Nutrient speciation, sources and transport processes in Great Lakes watersheds (Part 2)
- Sustaining ecosystem services in an era of Great Lakes urbanization
Oral presentations by group members:
- How much data is needed to robustly detect changes in water quality in agricultural watersheds?
- Nutrient Stoichiometry in the Grand River Watershed: The Role of Groundwater Silicon
- Modeling Stream Nitrate Concentrations in a Snow-dominated Catchment in Southwestern Ontario
- Chloride Storage Across a Gradient of Urban Watersheds in Southern Ontario, Canada
- Valuation and historical reconstruction of ecosystem services in the Grand River watershed
- Do Catchment Hotspots Control P & N Export To Lake Erie During An Extreme Snowmelt Event?
Poster presentations by group members: