Connecticut's first documented specimen of a highly invasive crab species native to eastern Asia was found at the end of June in Greenwich's Mianus Pond fishway. READ MORE (Stamford Advocate).
Monday, August 13, 2012
Friday, August 3, 2012
Artful stormwater management
A creative design for a stormwater facility that incorporates both function and aesthetics (reposted via the Water Environment Federation)
Monday, July 30, 2012
U.S. EPA announces Campus Rainworks Challenge
The U.S. EPA’s Office of Water is pleased to announce the Campus RainWorks Challenge for college and university students. EPA is inviting student teams to design an innovative green infrastructure project for their campus. Student teams will collaborate with a faculty advisor to develop design boards, a project narrative, and a short video describing their project. The winning teams will be awarded cash prizes as well as research funding.
Registration: September 4, 2012 – October 5, 2012
Entries Due: December 14, 2012
Winners Announced: April 22, 2013
Registration: September 4, 2012 – October 5, 2012
Entries Due: December 14, 2012
Winners Announced: April 22, 2013
Friday, July 20, 2012
Bedford conservationists need cash to save Twin Lakes plateau
BEDFORD — Million-dollar views would be protected forever and never sold to the highest bidder under an ambitious plan by a local conservation group to buy land from a luxury home developer. READ MORE (LoHud.com)
Monday, July 9, 2012
Friday, June 29, 2012
American Rivers report on water financing
American Rivers recently released a report following a series of interviews with water providers, finance experts, and NGOs about green infrastructure investment and implementation. The document provides a set of market-based strategies to optimize water financing for environmental as well as consumptive and wastewater uses:
Restoring Flows: Financing the Next Generation of Water Systems (American Rivers/Ceres, April 2012)
Restoring Flows: Financing the Next Generation of Water Systems (American Rivers/Ceres, April 2012)
Friday, June 22, 2012
Mianus River Park to host wildlife center
The red barn at Mianus River Park in Stamford was identified as a problem area by many stakeholders during watershed planning meetings. Now, the Wildlife Center of Fairfield County has announced plans to lease the building and transform it into a nature center and wildlife rehabilitation clinic. Read more (Stamford Advocate)...
Friday, June 15, 2012
EPA Announces Framework to Help Local Governments Manage Stormwater Runoff and Wastewater
WASHINGTON - Today the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a new framework to help local governments meet their Clean Water Act obligations... (read more)
Friday, June 8, 2012
State of the Sound: Grading the Region's Efforts to Restore and Protect Long Island Sound
Save the Sound's Leah Schmalz will be presenting as part of the Westport Public Library's Sunset Lecture Series on the State of the Sound report. Refreshments will be served at 6:00 p.m.
Leah will speak at 6:15 p.m. followed by a question and answer session at 6:45 p.m.
For more information, visit www.westportlibrary.org
Thursday, June 28 from 6-8pm
20 Jesup Road, Westport, CT
(Add the event to your Google calendar)
Thursday, June 28 from 6-8pm
20 Jesup Road, Westport, CT
(Add the event to your Google calendar)
Friday, June 1, 2012
Streamwalk Training, June 9th
The Mianus River Watershed Council is seeking volunteers to conduct streamwalk assessments of the Mianus River. Training will be held June 9th from 9am - 1pm at the Greenwich Audubon, with scientists from the Natural Resource Conservation Service. See the full announcement.
Friday, May 25, 2012
The Sound and The Saugatuck
Have you ever wondered how local rivers have shaped the history of their towns? In the nearby Saugatuck River Watershed, The Westport Historical Society presents a new exhibit, The Sound and The Saugatuck, opening today, May 25th.
Friday, May 18, 2012
Stormwater management case studies
From the Landscape Architecture Foundation, this database includes a collection of stormwater management and stream restoration case studies, with photos and plans (the studies are easily sorted by project type).
Friday, May 11, 2012
Detention basin retrofits
Retrofitting existing detention basins for water quality control can be a simple, cost-effective way of treating nonpoint source pollution. Retrofits are usually designed to promote infiltration and release less water from the basin. This might include planting or re-grading the basin area, or modifying the outlet structure that controls the release of water. This video shows some great examples of the retrofit process for several different basins. Although shot in Pennsylvania, the basic concepts are applicable for Connecticut. (Source: StormwaterPA).
Friday, May 4, 2012
Calling all nature photographers!
AKRF is looking for photos of the Mianus River. If you have a great image that you'd like to see published in the Watershed Based Plan, send your photo to akrfwaterresources@gmail.com. We'd very much appreciate it! If you don't want your photo printed, you can still share it on the blog (see last week's post). As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words.
Monday, April 30, 2012
What's your favorite place in the watershed?
Through the course of the watershed based planning process, there has been a lot of discussion about impairments and problem areas in the river. But what about all the wonderful places that make this a river worth preserving? With spring in full bloom, now is the perfect time to get out and reconnect with all the places in nature that make our role as environmental stewards so rewarding.
When AKRF was conducting the existing conditions assessment last spring, we snapped this picture of a spring wildflower (dutchman's breeches) found growing just off the trail in the Mianus River Gorge Preserve. It reminded us that beauty is abundant throughout the watershed, and available to anyone who takes a moment to look.
What about you? Do you have a favorite place for fishing or birdwatching? Do you have a photo that visually represents the scenic or environmental value of this important river? If so, we'd love to see or hear about it!
When AKRF was conducting the existing conditions assessment last spring, we snapped this picture of a spring wildflower (dutchman's breeches) found growing just off the trail in the Mianus River Gorge Preserve. It reminded us that beauty is abundant throughout the watershed, and available to anyone who takes a moment to look.
What about you? Do you have a favorite place for fishing or birdwatching? Do you have a photo that visually represents the scenic or environmental value of this important river? If so, we'd love to see or hear about it!
Friday, April 20, 2012
Friday, April 13, 2012
Friday, April 6, 2012
New approaches to municipal and industrial wastewater
Re-posted from Seth Brown of the Water Environment Federation, an encouraging article: "When Cookie Cutters Won't Cut It".
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Eel migration news
Eel news, from the Byram River but regionally relevant:
Trapped baby eels to get a helping hand in Greenwich (CT Post)
Trapped baby eels to get a helping hand in Greenwich (CT Post)
Friday, March 23, 2012
Friday, March 16, 2012
Spring Coastal Cleanup Dates
The Connecticut Fund for the Environment has scheduled spring cleanup dates up and down Long Island Sound beaches. View their schedule for dates and locations.
Friday, March 9, 2012
Outreach & Education Guidelines
AKRF is in the process of drafting education & outreach strategies for the watershed-based plan. We wanted to share this EPA guidance that we've found very useful:
Getting in Step: A Guide for Conducting Watershed Outreach Campaigns (USEPA 2003).
Getting in Step: A Guide for Conducting Watershed Outreach Campaigns (USEPA 2003).
Friday, March 2, 2012
EPA Green Infrastructure Technical Assistance
"This request for letters of interest (RLI) announces the availability of direct assistance (through EPA contract support) for projects that facilitate the use of green infrastructure to protect water quality. Technical assistance will be directed to watersheds/sewersheds with significant water quality degradation associated with urban stormwater. Assistance may be offered to communities with any level of green infrastructure implementation." See the request for letters of interest.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Friday, February 17, 2012
Weekend Reading
- From the NRDC, some excellent case studies & reference material
- The ruling on the NY State MS4 permit case, or if you're in a hurry, a summary of the case from Stormwater magazine.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Annual Meeting of the CT Association of Wetland Scientists
This year's program: "Monitoring Wetlands and Watercourses: Methods and Benefits"
Thursday March 22, 2012
8:15 am to 4:30 pm
Holiday Inn in North Haven
201 Washington Avenue, North Haven, CT
Thursday March 22, 2012
8:15 am to 4:30 pm
Holiday Inn in North Haven
201 Washington Avenue, North Haven, CT
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Friday, January 27, 2012
Social Change Website Examples
In order to move forward with implementation and education strategies for the Watershed-based Plan, it's important to consider how goals are understood by the public and to what extent residents and businesses can be motivated to participate in stewardship. Good PR requires simple communication of sometimes complicated scientific concepts. We'd like to share a few examples of conservation websites we've found that do an especially good job of distilling their message:
Friday, January 20, 2012
The Economic Impact of State Parks, Forests and Natural Resources
Following last week's post, a related (and local) example of the economic value of open space. According to CTDEEP and Uconn's Center for Economic Analysis (CCEA), "...outdoor activities on state lands have an economic impact of more than $1 billion a year." Read More...
Friday, January 13, 2012
Environmental Regulations and Jobs
Environmental regulations don't necessarily depress the job market, according to a new study by the Chesapeake Bay Foundation: http://www.northernnecknews.com/?p=517
Friday, January 6, 2012
Implementation Measures and Education
Many of the implementation measures outlined in the watershed-based plan could potentially be coupled with educational programs through school partnerships and volunteering. For example, a rain garden constructed at or near a school could serve as a demonstration site for educators, and could be maintained and monitored throughout the year by students. Local nature centers or environmental organizations could partner with school teachers to provide watershed education as part of basic science classes.
Trout Unlimited's Trout in the Classroom was suggested at the recent stakeholder meeting as a resource for both teachers and watershed advocates. The program provides lesson plans and a web resources library to engage students in ecosystem and habitat studies as they relate to the individual fish and to the wider watershed. The program includes raising the trout from eggs to fry in a classroom tank, where students monitor water quality and learn about trout habitat; at the end of the year students can release their trout into a state-approved stream.
Learn more about the program: http://www.troutintheclassroom.org/
Blair Mill Elementary School in Horsham Township, PA recently partnered with AKRF to design, install, and monitor a series of small stormwater management wetlands and riparian plantings. A watershed education program was developed with the help of Trout Unlimited's resources. Learn more about this project, and see the design concept.
What other established programs exist to help watershed managers engage local schools? How have others in the watershed used management efforts to promote community education?
Trout Unlimited's Trout in the Classroom was suggested at the recent stakeholder meeting as a resource for both teachers and watershed advocates. The program provides lesson plans and a web resources library to engage students in ecosystem and habitat studies as they relate to the individual fish and to the wider watershed. The program includes raising the trout from eggs to fry in a classroom tank, where students monitor water quality and learn about trout habitat; at the end of the year students can release their trout into a state-approved stream.
Learn more about the program: http://www.troutintheclassroom.org/
Blair Mill Elementary School in Horsham Township, PA recently partnered with AKRF to design, install, and monitor a series of small stormwater management wetlands and riparian plantings. A watershed education program was developed with the help of Trout Unlimited's resources. Learn more about this project, and see the design concept.
What other established programs exist to help watershed managers engage local schools? How have others in the watershed used management efforts to promote community education?
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