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The 2nd International Summit on Water Environmental Management is taking place in Nanjing, China on November 27, 2017. The Summit brings together international participants from academia, government, and industry and serves as a forum to exchange insights and generate knowledge on sustainable water management and promote international technology cooperation in water.

The latest Ecohydrology Seminar presentation was given by  Alice Dove, an Environmental Scientist from Environment and Climate Change Canada. Ms. Dove's talk, titled Water Quality in the Great Lakes: A Guided Tour, provided an overview of monitoring programs and water quality trends and issues.  

Additional information about the water quality of the Great Lakes can be found in the State of the Great Lakes 2017 reports.

A chapter written by Ecohydrology Research Group members Helen Powley and Philippe Van Cappellen and their colleague Michael Krom, from the University of Haifa and University of Leeds, reviews the unique biogeochemistry of the Mediterranean Sea. In particular, the authors address why the Mediterranean Sea, a nearly entirely landlocked marine basin, has remained oligotrophic despite large anthropogenic inputs of the nutrient elements phosphorus and nitrogen.

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Elaine defended her MSc!

Elaine Secord has successfully defended her MSc thesis titled “Assessing Microbial Viability and Biodegradation Capabilities in Sandstone”. She completed her MSc with the Ecohydrology Research Group, at the University of Waterloo. 

Based on the strength of her academic accomplishments, Taylor Maavara is the recipient of a 2017 University of Waterloo “Outstanding Achievement in Graduate Studies” honour. A total of nine awards – five at the Doctoral level and four at the Master’s level – are presented this year. She will receive the award at Fall convocation on October 20th. CONGRATULATIONS, Taylor!

To guide strategic investments by municipalities to adopt more effective urban stormwater management options, it is required that water managers get insight into the usefulness of a range of solutions in the presence of climate change.

Fereidoun Rezanezhad, Ecohydrology Assistant Professor, attended the “Subsurface and Coastal Water Dynamics and Peatland Ecology” Summer School organized by the Baltic TRANSCOAST research training group in Rostock, Germany. Fereidoun is a Mercator Fellow in the Baltic TRANSCOAST program and during this Summer School he gave 3 lectures on peat biogeochemical processes and presented the importance of peat structure on water storage, flow and solute transport using experimental and modeling approaches.

The International Society of Environmental Biogeochemistry is organizing its 23rd biannual Symposium on Environmental Biogeochemistry (ISEB23) in northern Queensland. This is the first time the Symposium is being held in Australia. Philippe Van Cappellen is presenting a talk on anthropogenic perturbations of nutrient cycles in river systems. This coming January, Philippe is taking over as President of the Society.  

The Water Institute hosted the Sino-Canada Water Environment Workshop at the University of Waterloo (UW), from September 18th to 20th. The workshop featured a series of research presentations, including one by Ecohydrology Research Group member, Dr. Fereidoun Rezanezhad, who gave a presentation titled Nutrient dynamics, transfer and retention across scales: Integration of hydrological and biogeochemical processes