News

Filter by:

Limit to items where the date of the news item:
Date range
Limit to items where the date of the news item:
Limit to news where the title matches:
Limit to news items where the audience is one or more of:

The University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ hosted the workshopÌýLocal Water Solutions in a Changing ClimateÌýon December 5, 2018. Almost 100 researchers, partners and knowledge users attended.

Nandita was invited to speak at the Ohio State University SENR Seminar Series. Her talk was entitled, "Back to the Future: How Past Land Use Impact Current Water Quality".

On October 24th, 2018, Zobia Jawed gave a guest talk to an Ecology Class at MacMaster University. The talk was titled "Nutrient Changes in the Great Lakes: Addressing Algae Blooms and Biodiversity in an Era of Climate Change". It focused on water as an interdisciplinary issue, looking specifically at waste water treatment plants.

John Dony, a current master's student working on the Lake Futures project, has been awarded the UW Provost Graduate Scholarship. The scholarship started in Fall 2018 and will continue for three semesters.

Congratulations John!

Haiyan Liu, a Lake Futures postdoctoral fellow, attended theÌý6thÌýWorld Congress of Environmental and Resource Economists in Gothenburg, Sweden this week.ÌýAt the conference, HaiyanÌýgave an oral presentation of her paper "Modeling Farmers’ Demand for Catastrophic Drought Risk Insurance under Climate Change Using Choice Experiments"Ìýin a parallel session.

Great job, Haiyan!

More information about this year's conference can be found on the .

This week, Lake Futures highly qualified personnel (HQP), including PhD students,ÌýMaster's students, postdoctoral fellows, and undergraduate students, had the opportunity to attend the Lake Futures summer retreat on Lake Erie, in which they were able to see the effects of their research first-hand. Dr. Mark Servos, lead investigator of Work Package 3: Ecosystems,Ìýorganized the two-day excursion.

Kim Van Meter, a postdoctoral fellow working on the Lake Futures project, won the first place prize among presentations given by postdoctoralÌýfellows at the . Kim's talk, titled "Biogeochemical Asynchrony", was presented as part of theÌýWatershed Management and Disturbance session, led in part by Lake Futures Project Investigator, Nandita Basu.