AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO WATERSHED MANAGEMENT PLANNING FOR TROUT LAKE, ONTARIO

Author(s):  
E. McBean ◽  
T. Mereu ◽  
G. Gartshore ◽  
C. Kitchen ◽  
M. Benson
2002 ◽  
Vol 2002 (2) ◽  
pp. 1053-1078
Author(s):  
Kelly A. Cave ◽  
Nancy J. Andrews ◽  
James W. Ridgway

Author(s):  
Alexandra Leitao BenHamadou1 ◽  
Zenaba Khatir ◽  
Noora Al-Shamary ◽  
Hassan Hassan ◽  
Zainab Hizan ◽  
...  

The NPRP9-394-1-090 project “Pearl Oyster: from national icon to guardian of Qatar's marine environment” had as main aim to develop and apply an integrated suite of chemical and biological methods as early warning tools to assess the “health” of Qatar’s marine environment. The central theme consisted in an investigative monitoring program around the use of the pearl oyster, Pictada imbricata radiata, as a sentinel or guardian species. We have characterized the main environmental contaminants of concern at a selected number of sites around the Qatari coast (UmmBab, Al Khor, Al Wakra and Simaisma), during 2 years, in summer and winter. Potential ecological effects of contaminants (targeted and untargeted) were investigated at different biological organization levels (gene, chromosome, cell, individual, population), through a multidisciplinary approach, using classical and genotoxicological endpoints, integrative histopathology and transcriptomic responses to the different environmental stresses. To our knowledge, this is the first time an integrated approach connecting all these disciplines has been applied in the Qatari marine environment. We present here the main results, of this 3 years project, obtained in all different disciplinary approaches. The results of this project will leave a legacy of resources for future Qatari researchers, including an open access transcriptome data base and the first description of common pathologies observed in the pearl oyster P. i. radiata. Moreover, they will also represent a sound science-based baseline data essential for conservation and management planning, by integration of the data from all the different disciplines applied in the project to assess the potential ecological effects of contaminants at different biological levels.


1963 ◽  
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2003 ◽  
Vol 2003 (4) ◽  
pp. 880-894 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas S. Baughman ◽  
Heather Dyke ◽  
Rick Brownlow ◽  
Steve Haubner

Author(s):  
Khai Ern Lee ◽  
Ramli Abdullah ◽  
Marlia Mohd Hanafiah ◽  
Azhar Abdul Halim ◽  
Mazlin Mokhtar ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 4460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Assefa ◽  
Aad Kessler ◽  
Luuk Fleskens

This study assessed farmers’ perceptions of the outcomes of the Campaign-Based Watershed Management (CBWM) program in Ethiopia, and how this influences their willingness to participate in the program. Key informant interviews, a household survey, and the Google Earth Engine were used to collect and analyze the relevant data. Results show that farmers’ perceived outcomes of the CBWM program hardly motivated them to participate in the program. Particularly, farmers were not motivated by the physical effects of the program, because of the limited direct benefits to individual households, and destruction of previously developed micro-watersheds by frequent runoff and human and animal disturbances. Similarly, farmers were not motivated by the economic effects of the program, because of the limitations/absence of benefit-sharing mechanisms and resultant conflicts among farmers. The only motivating outcome of the program concerned its effect on personal capacities, which was particularly appreciated in localities that were vulnerable to erosion. The results of the study suggest the need to (1) better integrate actions at watershed level to come to effective water runoff control, (2) enhance the participation of all local actors to come to more effective area closure initiatives with transparent benefit-sharing mechanisms, and (3) give much more emphasis to capacity building as a cross-cutting component in the program. Hence, in order to enhance the willingness of farmers to genuinely participate in the CBWM, the program should adopt a more participatory and integrated approach.


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