CRC Roundtable | November 2024

By |2024-11-20T16:40:47-05:00November 20th, 2024|Categories: CRC News, CRC Roundtable, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|Tags: |

Eat Your Invasives: The Bay’s Battle with Blue Catfish Blue catfish have been terrorizing Chesapeake Bay’s native fish for decades; they consume smaller fish and invertebrates in huge quantities and compete with larger fish. Some of their prey species are economically important, like blue crabs and menhaden, while others are already the focus of [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | November 2024

CRC Roundtable | March 2024

By |2024-03-20T15:59:40-04:00March 20th, 2024|Categories: Climate/Sea Level Rise, CRC News, CRC Roundtable, DEIJ, Education, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|Tags: |

How to Protect Local Waterways In 2019, the Local Government Advisory Committee and Local Leadership Workgroup began work on a suite of learning materials that frame the Chesapeake Bay Program’s goals through the lens of a very important audience: local government officials. Elected officials make decisions for their communities that impact restoration progress. This [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | March 2024

CRC Roundtable | November 2023

By |2023-11-16T13:53:17-05:00November 10th, 2023|Categories: Climate/Sea Level Rise, CRC News, CRC Roundtable, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|Tags: |

Shifting to the Shallows: Informed Site Selection One of the core conclusions of the Comprehensive Evaluation of System Response (CESR) report is that there is great potential and urgency in the restoration of shallow water areas; they are the places where many of our favorite Bay species live and reproduce as well as where [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | November 2023

CRC Roundtable | October 2023

By |2023-11-10T09:00:12-05:00October 10th, 2023|Categories: Climate/Sea Level Rise, CRC News, CRC Roundtable, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|Tags: |

Shifting to the Shallows: Refocusing Chesapeake Restoration Efforts The implications of the Comprehensive Evaluation of System Response (CESR) report ripple through all aspects of the Chesapeake Bay restoration effort. One of the core conclusions of CESR is that there is great potential and urgency in the restoration of shallow water areas; they are the [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | October 2023

CRC Roundtable | September 2023

By |2023-09-22T10:59:13-04:00September 22nd, 2023|Categories: Climate/Sea Level Rise, CRC News, CRC Roundtable, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|Tags: |

Evaluating Chesapeake Bay System Response: A CESR Q&A The Comprehensive Evaluation of System Response (CESR) report was released by the Scientific and Technical Advisory Committee (STAC), an independent liaison between the Bay’s scientific community and the Chesapeake Bay Program. Over 60 experts were involved in its creation, and its pages reflect on how the restoration effort [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | September 2023

CRC Roundtable | July 2023

By |2023-07-19T17:12:09-04:00July 7th, 2023|Categories: Climate/Sea Level Rise, CRC News, CRC Roundtable, DEIJ, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|Tags: |

Expanding the Chesapeake Bay Watershed report card to include social, economic and environmental justice indices Geographically explicit, data-rich Chesapeake Bay report cards have been developed annually by the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science for 16 years. But over the past several years, the report card expanded to include the Chesapeake watershed and [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | July 2023

CRC Roundtable | April 2023

By |2023-05-02T14:59:40-04:00April 12th, 2023|Categories: CRC News, CRC Roundtable, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|Tags: |

Improving Understanding and Coordination of Science Activities for PFAS in the Chesapeake Bay Those “forever chemicals” you may be hearing about are Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances, more commonly known as PFAS. They persist in our environment and are linked to long-lasting impacts on fish, other wildlife, and human health.  In response to growing concerns [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | April 2023

CRC Roundtable | March 2023

By |2023-03-23T12:36:07-04:00March 6th, 2023|Categories: Climate/Sea Level Rise, CRC News, CRC Roundtable, Living Resources|Tags: , |

Implementing clean water solutions for agriculture in Pennsylvania In 2016, 2019, and 2022, leaders from Pennsylvania’s agricultural and environmental communities participated in a series of “Pennsylvania in the Balance” conferences. In the early years, participants generated creative new ideas to position agriculture in the state as a solution for clean water. Convened by the [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | March 2023

CRC Roundtable | February 2023

By |2023-02-16T14:54:56-05:00February 3rd, 2023|Categories: CRC News, CRC Roundtable, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|

Integrating Social Science for Adaptive Management in Chesapeake Bay Program, Lisa Wainger and Daniel Read What do researchers and practitioners want from each other? Insights from the Advancing Engagement Workshop Series, Wes Eaton To continue December’s roundtable conversation on behavior change, February’s roundtable brought together a group of scholarly researchers with experience in [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | February 2023

CRC Roundtable | January 2023

By |2023-02-09T13:17:08-05:00January 3rd, 2023|Categories: Climate/Sea Level Rise, CRC News, CRC Roundtable, Estuarine Processes, Living Resources, Watershed Processes|

CRC Member Webinar Take-Over Series Old Dominion University Research Updates: Seagrass Blue Carbon and Effects of Floods on Water Quality Coasts are dynamic areas of exchange between land and water. Nitrogen and phosphate from land, for example, are essential for growth of seagrasses and their production of “blue carbon”. Nutrients in the Bay often [...]

Comments Off on CRC Roundtable | January 2023
Go to Top