Browsing by Subject "Green Infrastructure"
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Item Assessment of Stormwater Best Management Practices(University of Minnesota, 2008-04) Anderson, James L.; Asleson, Brooke C.; Baker, Lawrence A.; Erickson, Andrew J.; Gulliver, John S.; Hozalski, Raymond M.; Mohseni, Omid; Nieber, John L.; Riter, Trent; Weiss, Peter; Wilson, Bruce N.; Wilson, Matt A.; Gulliver, John S.; Anderson, James L.Item Comprehensive Green Infrastructure Planning: The Way Forward for Ecological and Environmental Justice(2012-05-30) Stewart, PaulaGreen infrastructure planning is an alternative concept that takes a long-term strategic and holistic approach to urban and regional development. It focuses on limiting sprawl, preserving or reclaiming natural areas of high environmental significance, and reconnecting fragmented landscapes. It includes highly dense, highly energy and resource efficient, racially and socially mixed built environments with urban agriculture as a necessary component. It balances the needs of humans and nature, economic interests, and ecosystem health while furthering environmental justice for all.Item Data for: Internal Loading in Stormwater Ponds as a Phosphorus Source to Downstream Waters(2019-04-15) Taguchi, Vinicius J; Olsen, Tyler A; Natarajan, Poornima; Janke, Benjamin D; Gulliver, John S; Finlay, Jacques C; Stefan, Heinz G; ; taguc006@umn.edu; Taguchi, Vinicius J; University of Minnesota - St. Anthony Falls Laboratory - Stormwater Research GroupStormwater ponds remove phosphorus through sedimentation before releasing captured water downstream. Internal loading can impair net phosphorus removal but is understudied in these highly modified systems. Using a combination of methods, we assessed the prevalence and potential causes of sediment phosphorus release in urban ponds. In a three-year, 98-pond dataset, nearly 40% of ponds had median water column total phosphorus concentrations exceeding the 95% confidence interval for runoff values (0.38 mg/L), suggesting widespread internal loading. In a subsequent intensive monitoring study of four ponds, strong stratification prevented spring and summer diurnal mixing, resulting in persistent hypolimnion anoxia (<1 mg/L dissolved oxygen). Incubated sediment cores from seven ponds demonstrated high anoxic phosphorus release. Sediment analysis revealed high labile organic and redox-sensitive phosphorus fractions with release potential at anoxia onset. Our analyses suggest phosphorus accumulated in stormwater ponds is highly sensitive to internal loading, reducing net removal and contributing to downstream eutrophication.Item Using the Social-Ecological Systems Framework to Evaluate Green Infrastructure: Coastal management case studies from Vietnam and Bangladesh(HHH, 2015-05-15) Cowles, Erin, R.; Cowles, Erin, R.