Blog posts for EcoCheck

2013 Chesapeake Bay report released

Bill Dennison ·
23 May 2014
Environmental Report Cards | Science Communication | 

The 2013 Chesapeake Bay report card provides an important insight into how stormwater runoff affects the Bay. The contrast between the Upper Eastern Shore report card scores which are degrading over time versus the James River report card scores which are improving over time provides important insights. Both regions experienced intense rainfall in 2013, yet the report card scores responded differently.

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Map of monitoring stations in Chesapeake Bay (left) and researchers monitoring water quality of Chesapeake Bay (right).

Do not go gently into that black abyss of Chesapeake Bay monitoring cuts

Bill Dennison ·
9 July 2013
Applying Science |     1 comments

At the June Science and Technical Advisory Committee (STAC) meeting and at the Science and Technical Analysis and Reporting (STAR) meeting, we were presented with the scenarios of a $1.1-1.2 million dollar cut to the Chesapeake Bay monitoring program. This would be a nearly 25% reduction of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) funding for the tidal and non-tidal monitoring. This monitoring program, which has been occurring continuously since ca.

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Caroline Wicks presenting at the STAR seminar on June 27, 2013. Credit: Bill Dennison

Enhancing the Chesapeake Bay report card with new indicators and new methods

Bill Dennison ·
3 July 2013
Environmental Report Cards |     1 comments

On 27 June 2013, Caroline Wicks presented the STAR seminar in anticipation of the 2012 Chesapeake Bay report card release. The seminar was entitled 'Enhancing the Chesapeake Bay report card with new indicators and new methods'. In capturing the discussion following the seminar, I have converted the discussion into a series of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs). Caroline Wicks presenting at the STAR seminar on June 27, 2013. Credit:

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Industrial nitrogen fixation has doubled the flow of atmospheric nitrogen into terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.

Celebrating 100 Years of Industrial Nitrogen Fixation

Bill Nuttle ·
26 April 2013
Applying Science | Learning Science |     1 comments

People are part of a hybrid socio-environmental ecosystem. The debate over whether people should start geoengineering the atmosphere in order to prevent the worst effects of global warming ignores one essential fact - we already are geoengineering the atmosphere. Geoengineering is the deliberate effort to manipulate processes that control conditions in the atmosphere on a global scale.

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Riverkeeper Conservancy report card launch.

Midshore Riverkeeper Conservancy report card launch

Bill Dennison ·
19 April 2013
Environmental Report Cards |     2 comments

On April 13, I was a speaker at the report card launch of the Choptank and Miles-Wye Rivers, sponsored by the Midshore Riverkeeper Conservancy in Easton, Maryland. The launch was held in the beautiful Talbot County Historical Society auditorium. Tim Junkin, the Executive Director of Midshore Riverkeeper Conservancy, was the Master of Ceremonies. The event was very well attended, with well over a hundred people in attendance, far exceeding expectations.

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This monument is close by the location of the public pump Snow identified as an epicenter in the 1854 cholera outbreak in London.

Everything Down the Drain - Why?

Bill Nuttle ·
17 April 2013
Applying Science | 

Is it time to rethink our 19th century approach to dealing with human waste? The discovery of the cause of a cholera epidemic in London, in the mid 19th century, unleashed an international movement that improved sanitation in cities, and also altered the relationship between people and the environment. The result has been an increase in living standards.

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European Space Agency).

Great Barrier Reef literacy

Bill Dennison ·
5 April 2013
Environmental Literacy |     2 comments

The concept of environmental literacy derives from a series of programs that have established various literacy principles, for example, ocean literacy and Chesapeake Bay literacy. These distillations attempt to identify the essence of what an informed person needs to know. The literacy principles form the overall outline presented here, but it is in the richness of examples, stories and visual supporting materials that bring the literacy alive. European Space Agency).

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Caroline Wicks, Heath Kelsey, Russell Callender, Bill Dennison, and Ken Barton with a framed history of EcoCheck's first phase.

Ending a NOAA partnership and beginning a new EcoCheck chapter

Bill Dennison ·
3 January 2013
Environmental Report Cards | Science Communication | 

EcoCheck was formed in 2004 as a partnership between the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (UMCES) and the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). It was created by Drs. Bill Dennison (UMCES) and Bob Wood (NOAA) to develop ecological forecasting and environmental reporting capacity in the Chesapeake Bay.

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Figure 2. Potential representation of results from goal and value assessment.

Mississippi River Report Card Vision and Framework

Heath Kelsey ·
6 November 2012
Environmental Report Cards | 

In September, America’s Great Watershed Initiative (AGWI) held a summit in St. Louis, Missouri to develop more coordinated management of the Mississippi River Basin. AGWI is an initiative primarily led by The Nature Conservancy (TNC), although the management of the initiative itself is up for discussion. The summit brought together stakeholders with many perspectives to work on common management, communications, and assessment frameworks for the Mississippi River Basin.

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