Item talk:Q229012

From geokb
Revision as of 22:40, 17 August 2024 by Sky (talk | contribs) (added USGS web article schema.org data to item talk page)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

{

 "@context": "http://schema.org/",
 "@type": "WebPage",
 "additionalType": "Project",
 "url": "https://www.usgs.gov/centers/columbia-environmental-research-center/science/ecological-structure-and-function-large",
 "headline": "Ecological Structure and Function, Large-River Floodplains",
 "datePublished": "June 5, 2018",
 "author": [
   {
     "@type": "Person",
     "name": "Robert Jacobson, PhD",
     "url": "https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/robert-jacobson",
     "identifier": {
       "@type": "PropertyValue",
       "propertyID": "orcid",
       "value": "0000-0002-8368-2064"
     }
   }
 ],
 "description": [
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "Results"
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "Return to Riverine Habitat Dynamics"
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "Some key results of this research are:"
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "This project seeks to develop tools and datasets that provide insights to the common ground between flood-risk reduction and ecosystem services on large-river floodplains of the Central United States. Floodplains of large rivers are valued for their agricultural productivity and development potential, but recent floods have demonstrated the high costs and lack of resiliency when floodplains are inundated, especially due to erosion and deposition associated with levee breaks. The potential ecological benefits of conservation lands in floodplains also have been recognized, including contributions to recreation, flood-risk reduction, nutrient processing, and biodiversity. Questions faced by decisionmakers are where and how to optimize land uses in floodplains to achieve the greatest net social benefits. A direct and pressing information need relates to design for levee setbacks that provide naturalized land between a levee and the river."
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "The objectives of this project are to provide tools and understanding that can be used to inform floodplain management decisions. Specific objectives include:"
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "Objectives"
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "Return to River Studies"
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "Approach"
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "This research has been carried out as a collaboration among the USGS-Columbia Environmental Research Center, USGS-Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, University of Missouri, Southern Illinois University-Carbondale, and The Nature Conservancy"
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "As a result, we developed a range of hydrology and hydraulic modeling tools to evaluate floodplain inundation over a spectrum of spatial and temporal resolutions. These range from steady state 1-dimensional hydraulic models based on frequency statistics (Jacobson and others, 2007; Chojnacki and others, 2012), to unsteady 1-dimensional, high resolution models (Bulliner and others, 2020), to multi-dimensional hydrodynamic models (Jacobson and others, 2015; Erwin and others, 2018). The 1-dimensional unsteady modeling was recently expanded and analyzed in the context of climate change (Jacobson and others, 2022). Present efforts emphasize high-resolution multi-dimensional modeling of floodplains to explore optimal levee-setback designs. For synthesis to a broader scale we also developed a hydrogeomorphic classification of connectivity of large rivers of the Upper Midwest broad-scale classification of large rivers of the Central United States (Jacobson and others, 2019)."
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "Our approach to developing quantitative models of floodplain connectivity has been based on information needed by managers and restorers of floodplain lands (Jacobson and others, 2011). A survey of floodplain conservation land managers indicated that their greatest need was for understanding patterns of present and future inundation (Bouska and others, 2016)."
   },
   {
     "@type": "TextObject",
     "text": "Return to Large River Ecology, Restoration, and Management"
   }
 ],
 "funder": {
   "@type": "Organization",
   "name": "Columbia Environmental Research Center",
   "url": "https://www.usgs.gov/centers/columbia-environmental-research-center"
 },
 "about": [
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Geology"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Large River Ecology, Restoration, and Management"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Environmental Health"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "freshwater ecosystems"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Energy"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Methods and Analysis"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Riverine Habitat Dynamics"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Information Systems"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Large-Scale Restoration Science"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Biology"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Ecosystems"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Freshwater Systems"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Browse All Research Projects"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Water"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Science Technology"
   },
   {
     "@type": "Thing",
     "name": "Ecosystem Services"
   }
 ]

}