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Stroud Center

Restoring and Protecting Water Quality and Mitigating Flooding in Rural Landscapes

800 453 Stroud Water Research Center

Executive Director Dave Arscott, Ph.D., shared how Stroud Water Research Center is working to mitigate threats to water quality.

Stream Degradation and Restoration With Aquatic Insects as Our Guide

800 451 Stroud Water Research Center

This webinar aimed to help agricultural conservation and ecosystem restoration practitioners reorient efforts toward watershed-scale approaches to achieve local restoration goals.

Dam, Dam Go Away: A Wild and Scenic Vision for America’s Rivers

800 450 Stroud Water Research Center

Learn about the policy and science of dam removal, federal protections for the free-flowing Delaware River, and the story of the Wild and Scenic Musconetcong River.

Reclaiming the Commons: Some Thoughts on Rivers, Wildlife, and People

800 450 Stroud Water Research Center

By treating our commons as a resource to be exploited instead of a public trust to be protected, we threaten to destroy the very thing on which we depend.

Updates to Water Quality Mobile App Support Data Collection and Stream-to-Screen Education

800 450 Stroud Water Research Center

Are you looking for a new digital learning tool to support your water quality monitoring with students or citizen scientists? Check out Stroud Water Research Center’s Water Quality Mobile App.

Stroud Center Science Informed Fracking Ban Decision

500 280 Stroud Water Research Center

The accidental release of hydraulic fracking wastewater into streams, even a single drop mixed with 100 drops of streamwater, will harm or kill aquatic insects and even certain fish species.

The Riparian Buffer Arboretum showcases woody species that are proven performers for floodplains.

Tour Our Riparian Buffer Mini-Arboretum

638 358 Stroud Water Research Center

In the interest of testing new plants that could further enhance riparian areas, we’ve planted a mini-arboretum along the banks of White Clay Creek in our experimental watershed.

First Resource Bank made a $2,500 Earned Income Tax Credit contribution to environmental education.

First Resource Bank Contribution Boosts Virtual and In-Person Education Programming

800 450 Stroud Water Research Center

The environmental education team is staying active during the pandemic by offering smaller, outside, in-person classes and virtual programming to teachers across the state and beyond.