- Fisheries and Aquaculture Studies
- Agricultural Economics and Practices
- Fish Biology and Ecology Studies
- Fire effects on ecosystems
- Sustainability and Climate Change Governance
- Hydrology and Watershed Management Studies
- Flood Risk Assessment and Management
- Social and Economic Development in India
- Rangeland and Wildlife Management
- Hydrology and Sediment Transport Processes
- Fish Ecology and Management Studies
- Disaster Management and Resilience
- Landslides and related hazards
- Climate change impacts on agriculture
- Complex Systems and Decision Making
- Qualitative Comparative Analysis Research
- Forest Management and Policy
- Archaeology and Natural History
- Interdisciplinary Research and Collaboration
- Policy Transfer and Learning
- Climate Change, Adaptation, Migration
- Global Trade and Competitiveness
- Global Health and Epidemiology
- Migration and Labor Dynamics
- Innovative Approaches in Technology and Social Development
University of New Mexico
2023-2025
Arizona State University
2020-2024
Northeastern University
2024
Abstract We offer the first study unpacking taxonomy of collaboratives that undertake wildland fire management and how relates to resilience. developed a comprehensive inventory totaling 133 across twelve states in western United States. extracted each collaborative’s vision, mission, program goals, actions, stakeholder composition. Based on this data we summarize temporal spatial trends collaborative formation discuss drivers. Furthermore, cluster map based patterns co-occurrence goals....
The importance of collaborative approaches to governing social-ecological systems (SES) towards more transformative outcomes is now widely acknowledged. Theoretical and meth- odological frameworks enable such collaborations are being developed across a range disciplines. Transdisciplinary emerging as key enabler potentially trans- formative in SES, particularly where these characterized by 'multiple multi- ples' (e.g. multiple scales, knowledge systems, etc.). A typical approach studying...
Global climate models project that New Mexico's Upper Rio Grande watershed is expected to become more arid and experience greater climatic hydrological extremes in the next 50 years. The resulting transitions will have dramatic implications for downstream water users. its tributaries provide about half of population, including communities Albuquerque Santa Fe, surrounding agricultural areas. In absence formal adaptation strategies, informal governance arrangements are emerging facilitate...
Abstract Due to its potential geo-political and environmental implications, climate migration is an increasing concern the international community. However, while there considerable attention devoted in response sea-level rise, a limited understanding of human mobility due freshwater inland hydroclimatic changes. Hence, aim this paper examine existing evidence on as adaptation strategy A meta-review papers published between 2014 2019 yielded 67 publications, majority which focus handful...
Download This Paper Open PDF in Browser Add to My Library Share: Permalink Using these links will ensure access this page indefinitely Copy URL DOI
The magnitude of water-induced disasters is projected to increase in the coming decades. Yet, there a substantial gap understanding how local knowledge and Indigenous are employed respond climate change disasters. We examine this through meta-review literature published between 2014 2019 yielding 39 scholarly papers. indicates that highlights marginalized people facing multiple risks threaten their ability produce enough food for consumption, secure water irrigation, live sustainable...
We present an innovative framework for assessing fluvial aquatic species conservation in arid rivers under conditions of impending regime shift using the case example Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program (UCREFRP).We assess effectiveness program actions first, ecoregional impact second and adaptive management paradigm this context third, mixed qualitative quantitative approaches.Assessment utilizes annual flow variability, year-byyear summation categories (hydrological,...
Conventional physically based models have long yielded promising results, as they been the main tool to depict underpinnings of physics governing hydrological events. These models, however, suffer from certain issues such intense calibration time or uncertainty in estimation variables. The development sophisticated data-driven techniques, and machine learning particular, combined with rapid increases computational abilities (graphics processing units, computer clusters. etc.), has enabled...
This study characterizes the resilience of organizations undertaking river basin governance and recovery. The Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program (UCREFRP) Lower Multi-Species Conservation (LCR-MSCP) are defined in this as polycentric nested within larger institutional mechanisms governing Basin. utilizes an environmental disturbance-organizational response framework to characterize organizational resilience—and uses attitudinal diversity (characterized by attitudes toward...
With a particular emphasis on the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program (UCR-EFRP) and Lower Multi-Species Conservation (LCR-MSCP), we analyze, for each program, four system properties that contribute to resilience: architecture, which includes (1) connectivity distribution (2) assemblage of elements; dynamics, (3) social natural capital flows (4) renewal continuation. Each these is analyzed based specific corresponding biophysical indicators. The were ranked carefully...