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Resources

Resources

A repository of data, publications, tools, and other products from project teams, Science Collaborative program, and partners.

Displaying 201 - 210 of 215
Tool |

This survey, prepared and administered by a 2010 Collaborative Research project team in Maine, asks for residents' opinions about how riparian land is managed in the Merriland, Branch Brook, and Little Rivers Watershed.

Report |

This report summarizes an analysis of ecosystem service values provided by protection and restoration of riparian land in the Merriland, Branch Brook and Little River (MBLR) watershed in south coastal Maine.

Tool |

This tool, developed for the 2011 Hudson River Sustainable Shorelines project, can be used to provide a rough quantification of site attributes known to affect biota and ecological processes in the shore zone.

Journal Article |

This article provides a comprehensive summary of what is known about the ecological functioning of the shore zone in freshwater ecosystems.

Journal Article |

This article, published as part of the Hudson River Sustainable Shorelines project in 2012, reports on an effort to document the biodiversity supported by different kinds of shore zones in the Hudson River Estuary.

Journal Article |

https://doi.org/10.1175/JPO-D-11-063.1This article, published in the Journal of Physical Oceanography in 2012, reports on an analysis of ice on tidal hydrodynamics in the Hudson River Estuary.

Journal Article |

This article, published in Hydrobiologia in 2014, reports on research into the ecology of wrack (organic matter that is washed onto shore) on different types of Hudson River shorelines (natural and engineered) as part of a 2010 Collaborative Research project.

Journal Article |

This article, produced as part of the Hudson River Sustainable Shorelines project, is a comprehensive analysis of the abundance and composition of vegetation living in riprap revetments on Hudson River shorelines.

Report |

This handbook, the result of a 2010 Collaborative Research project, offers suggestions for practical ways that landowners and land managers can protect shore zones and increase the benefits they provide.

Report |

Oysters are the tiny superheroes of coastal environments. They enhance water quality, create habitat, and protect shorelines from storms and erosion. Along the Pacific Coast, native oysters are in decline, due in part to sedimentation, inadequate protection, and unsustainable harvests.