Science Inventory

Watershed Management in the United States

Citation:

RUSSO, R. C., B. RASHLEIGH, AND R. B. AMBROSE. Watershed Management in the United States. Chapter 11, I.E. Gonenc, A. Vadineanu, J.P. Wolflin, and R.C. Russo (ed.), Sustainable Use and Development of Watersheds. Springer, New York, NY, , 173-198, (2008).

Impact/Purpose:

The overall objective is to develop modeling and decision support capabilities that allow environmental managers and planners to protect, conserve, and restore aquatic habitats and species.

Description:

A watershed approach provides an effective framework for dealing with water resources challenges. Watersheds provide drinking water, recreation, and ecological habitat, as well as a place for waste disposal, a source of industrial cooling water, and navigable inland water transport. Consequently, much depends on the health of watersheds. Watersheds are threatened by wastewater and nonpoint source runoff that load surface waters with excess organic matter, nutrients, pathogens, solids, and toxic substances. Physical alterations, such as paving and stream channelization, change both the hydrologic regime and habitat. Estuaries are of particular importance, since they have great economic, ecological, recreational, and aesthetic value. An approach to the protection, management, and restoration of these water resources in the United States, and the respective roles of federal, state, and local governments, as well as the private sector and volunteer groups, is discussed. Protecting and sustaining watersheds requires that water resource goals be prioritized within a coordinating framework.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( BOOK CHAPTER)
Product Published Date:07/15/2008
Record Last Revised:09/15/2008
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 188096