Item talk:Q49503: Difference between revisions

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orcid:
ORCiD:
   meta:
   meta:
     status_code: 200
     status_code: 200
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           url-name: Professional page
           url-name: Professional page
           visibility: public
           visibility: public
usgs_staff_profile:
USGS Staff Profile:
   meta:
   '@context': https://schema.org
    url: https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/robert-f-stallard
  '@type': Person
    timestamp: '2024-01-30T19:21:14.964427'
   affiliation: []
    status_code: 200
  description:
   profile:
  - '@type': TextObject
    name: Robert F Stallard
     abstract: Research Hydrologist / Biogeochemist with the Water Resources Mission
    name_qualifier: null
       Area
     titles:
     additionalType: short description
    - Research Hydrologist / Biogeochemist
  - '@type': TextObject
    organizations:
     abstract: Robert Stallard has been at the USGS since 1987 and is now a Scientist
    - !!python/tuple
       Emeritus in the Hydro-Eco Interactions Branch of the Earth Systems Processing
      - Water Resources Mission Area
       Division of the USGS Water Resources Mission Area.
       - https://www.usgs.gov/mission-areas/water-resources
     additionalType: staff profile page introductory statement
     email: stallard@usgs.gov
  - '@type': TextObject
    orcid: 0000-0001-8209-7608
     abstract: 'Robert Stallard has been at the USGS since 1987 and is now a Scientist
     intro_statements:
       Emeritus in the Hydro-Eco Interactions Branch of the Earth Systems Processing
    - Robert Stallard has been at the USGS since 1987 and is now a Scientist Emeritus
       Division of the Water Mission Area. He studies how land-cover and climate change
       in the Hydro-Eco Interactions Branch of the Earth Systems Processing Division
       affect water movement through soils, weathering, and erosion, and how these,
       of the USGS Water Resources Mission Area.
      in turn, affect the composition and dispersal of dissolved and solid phases
     expertise_terms:
       in rivers and trace gases in the atmosphere. Areas of expertise include surface-water
    - biodiversity
      hydrology, major element and nutrient biogeochemistry, soil formation and sediment
    - ecosystems
      genesis, vegetation-landscape interaction, carbon-cycle characterization on
    - forest ecosystems
       land and in the ocean, and assessment of land-use and climate change. His work
    - habitat alteration
      has included the study of natural and human-altered landscapes, in the Americas,
    - wetland ecosystems
      Southeast Asia, and Africa, including large parts of the Amazon, Orinoco, Mississippi,
    - deforestation
      and Panama Canal Basins and eastern Puerto Rico.Most of his current efforts
    - human impacts
      are committed to a multi-catchment investigations designed to distinguish the
    - land use change
      roles of vegetation, climate, and land-cover change and to put this in a hydrologic
    - surface water quality
      and biogeochemical framework as well as to examine ecosystem costs and services
    - erosion
      focusing on water, carbon, and biodiversity. Two projects currently consume
    - sedimentation
      most of his USGS time: (1) Work related to the Luquillo USGS Water, Energy,
    - soil chemistry
      and Biogeochemical Budget (WEBB) Project in eastern Puerto Rico and parallel
    - water chemistry
      work in Panama, which has as a goal the comprehensive assessment of catchment
    - hydrology
       hydrology and biogeochemistry in a hydrologically energetic landscapes. (2)
    - runoff
      The Agua Salud Project in the Central Panama Canal Basin examines the manifold
    - sediment transport
    - fires
    - floods
    - hurricanes
    - landslides
    - droughts
    - streamflow
    - water budget
    professional_experience: []
    education: []
    affiliations: []
    honors: []
     abstracts: []
    personal_statement: 'Robert Stallard has been at the USGS since 1987 and is now
       a Scientist Emeritus in the Hydro-Eco Interactions Branch of the Earth Systems
       Processing Division of the Water Mission Area. He studies how land-cover and
       climate change affect water movement through soils, weathering, and erosion,
      and how these, in turn, affect the composition and dispersal of dissolved and
       solid phases in rivers and trace gases in the atmosphere. Areas of expertise
      include surface-water hydrology, major element and nutrient biogeochemistry,
      soil formation and sediment genesis, vegetation-landscape interaction, carbon-cycle
       characterization on land and in the ocean, and assessment of land-use and climate
      change. His work has included the study of natural and human-altered landscapes,
      in the Americas, Southeast Asia, and Africa, including large parts of the Amazon,
      Orinoco, Mississippi, and Panama Canal Basins and eastern Puerto Rico.Most of
      his current efforts are committed to a multi-catchment investigations designed
      to distinguish the roles of vegetation, climate, and land-cover change and to
      put this in a hydrologic and biogeochemical framework as well as to examine
      ecosystem costs and services focusing on water, carbon, and biodiversity. Two
      projects currently consume most of his USGS time: (1) Work related to the Luquillo
      USGS Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budget (WEBB) Project in eastern Puerto
      Rico and parallel work in Panama, which has as a goal the comprehensive assessment
       of catchment hydrology and biogeochemistry in a hydrologically energetic landscapes.
      (2) The Agua Salud Project in the Central Panama Canal Basin examines the manifold
       effects of different styles of reforestation as compared to mature forested
       effects of different styles of reforestation as compared to mature forested
       and deforested catchments. The project started in 2008 and involves 13 small
       and deforested catchments. The project started in 2008 and involves 13 small
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       of the Amazon River System."B.S., Earth & Planetary Sciences: 1974, Massachusetts
       of the Amazon River System."B.S., Earth & Planetary Sciences: 1974, Massachusetts
       Institute of Technology. Emphasis in Planetary Physics and Chemistry.'
       Institute of Technology. Emphasis in Planetary Physics and Chemistry.'
    additionalType: personal statement
  email: stallard@usgs.gov
  hasCredential: []
  hasOccupation:
  - '@type': OrganizationalRole
    affiliatedOrganization:
      '@type': Organization
      name: Water Resources Mission Area
      url: https://www.usgs.gov/mission-areas/water-resources
    roleName: Research Hydrologist / Biogeochemist
    startDate: '2024-05-12T15:57:27.156525'
  identifier:
  - '@type': PropertyValue
    propertyID: GeoKB
    value: https://geokb.wikibase.cloud/entity/Q49503
  - '@type': PropertyValue
    propertyID: ORCID
    value: 0000-0001-8209-7608
  jobTitle: Research Hydrologist / Biogeochemist
  knowsAbout:
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: biodiversity
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: ecosystems
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: forest ecosystems
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: habitat alteration
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: wetland ecosystems
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: deforestation
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: human impacts
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: land use change
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: surface water quality
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: erosion
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: sedimentation
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: soil chemistry
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: water chemistry
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: hydrology
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: runoff
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: sediment transport
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: fires
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: floods
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: hurricanes
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: landslides
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: droughts
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: streamflow
  - '@type': Thing
    additionalType: self-claimed expertise
    name: water budget
  memberOf:
    '@type': OrganizationalRole
    member:
      '@type': Organization
      name: U.S. Geological Survey
    name: staff member
    startDate: '2024-05-12T15:57:27.153751'
  name: Robert F Stallard
  url: https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/robert-f-stallard