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Newbold

Denis Newbold and Bern Sweeney

Study: 100-Foot Wide Forest Keeps Streams Healthy

350 233 Stroud Water Research Center

New literature review shows streamside forest buffers should be at least 100 feet wide on each side to protect freshwater ecosystems from human activities.

Long-Term Research in Environmental Biology (LTREB): Dynamics of Stream Ecosystem Responses Across Gradients of Reforestation and Changing Climate in a Tropical Dry Forest

800 532 Stroud Water Research Center

Stroud Water Research Center has expanded on 20 years of research on tropical streams near the Maritza Biological Station in northwest Costa Rica, which provides the framework of this study,…

Bern Sweeney standing in a newly planted riparian forest buffer.

How Many Trees Does It Take to Protect a Stream?

400 295 Stroud Water Research Center

A literature review by the Stroud Center concluded that forest buffers should be at least 30 meters, or nearly 100 feet, wide to adequately protect streams.

Publication title with image of a mayfly

A variable source area for groundwater evapotranspiration: impacts on modeling stream flow

350 210 Stroud Water Research Center

Tsang, Y.P., G. Hornberger, L.A. KaplanJ.D. Newbold, and A.K. Aufdenkampe. 2014. Hydrological Processes 28(4):2439–2450.

Publication title with image of a mayfly

Characteristic length scales and time‐averaged transport velocities of suspended sediment in the mid‐Atlantic Region, USA

350 210 Stroud Water Research Center

J. Pizzuto, E.R. Schenk, C.R. Hupp, A. Gellis, G. Noe, E. Williamson, D.L. Karwan, M. O’Neal, J.  Marquard, R. Aalto, and J.D. Newbold. 2014. Water Resources Research 50:790–805.

Publication title with image of a mayfly

Solute-specific scaling of inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus uptake in streams

350 210 Stroud Water Research Center

Hall, R.O., Jr., M.A. Baker, E.J. Rosi-Marshall, J.L. Tank, and J.D. Newbold. 2013. Biogeosciences 10:7323–7331.

Publication title with image of a mayfly

Ecosystem metabolism and nutrient uptake in Peruvian headwater streams

350 210 Stroud Water Research Center

Bott, T.L., and J.D. Newbold. 2013. International Review of Hydrobiology 98:117–131.

UpStream Newsletter, April 2013

800 532 Stroud Water Research Center

Building New Ideas on Old Foundations: “The River Continuum Concept” remains the most-often cited paper in its field. So, when Melinda Daniels, Ph.D., wrote “The River Discontinuum,” people noticed.