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We’ve Missed This! Stroud Center Resumes Fish Monitoring

It feels like a breath of fresh air for our research staff to resume our fish monitoring project in 37 streams of the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area ...

Earth Week Volunteers Give Streamside Forest a Helping Hand

Stroud Water Research Center wrapped up Earth Week by revisiting two streamside tree plantings for spring maintenance ...

Treated Sewage Sludge May Be a Pathway for PFAS Contamination of Soil, Water, and Ultimately, Our Food

To help understand the extent of this problem in Pennsylvania, scientists are looking at the occurrence and migration of biosolid-derived PFASs into soil and water on agricultural fields ...

Why Is New York City Studying Pennsylvania’s Lehigh River?

Melinda Daniels, Ph.D., was interviewed as part of an NPR story about a study that’s causing concern among Pennsylvanians who depend on the river for their livelihoods ...

Changing of the Guard

It is with deep gratitude that we share the news that our friend and longtime board chair, Rod Moorhead, has stepped down to emeritus status ...

David Wise Receives DCNR Watershed Forestry Leadership Award

Wise connects the dots between partners, funders, and landowners to increase the implementation of best practices in land management ...

Restoring and Protecting Water Quality and Mitigating Flooding in Rural Landscapes

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

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

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

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 ...