RMRS Air, Water, & Aquatic Environments Science Program US Forest Service - RMRS Air, Water, & Aquatic Environments Science Program USDA Forest Service Research & Development

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AWAE Program Headquarters
322 East Front St., Ste 401

Boise, ID 83702

(208) 373-4340

 


Rocky Mountain Research Station Headquarters

2150 Centre Ave., Bldg A
Fort Collins, CO 80526

(970) 295-5923

 

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The RMRS Air, Water, and Aquatic Environments (AWAE) Science Program develops core knowledge, methods, and technologies that enable effective watershed management in forests and grasslands, sustain biodiversity, and maintain healthy watershed conditions.

 

 

  • Our Mission
  • Our Scientists
  • Subject Areas
  • Unit Locations
  • Technology Transfer
  • Products, Models & Tools

Mission Statement

The Air, Water, and Aquatic Environments (AWAE) Research Program conducts basic and applied research on the effects of natural processes and human activities on watershed resources including interactions between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. The knowledge we develop supports the management, conservation, and restoration of terrestrial, riparian and aquatic ecosystems and provides for sustainable clean air and water quality and delivery in the Interior West.


RMRS Introduction | RMRS-AWAE (4354) Charter

 

Natural disturbances, land management, and human expansion affect the quality and quantity of air, water and aquatic resources. Our research explores the complex relationships among the physical, chemical and biological properties of watersheds, the ecosystem processes that sustain biodiversity, and resource conservation and restoration to meet the science needs of resource managers and natural resource policy.

 

From discoveries about basic ecological and biological processes, we develop models to predict watershed responses to changing landscape and climate conditions. Because managers need tools to evaluate environmental change and manage terrestrial and aquatic resources, we develop science applications to transfer knowledge into scientifically sound management recommendations.

 

With capabilities in atmospheric sciences, soils, forest engineering, biogeochemistry, hydrology, terrestrial and riparian plant physiology, aquatic ecology and limnology, conservation biology and fisheries, our scientists focus on two key research problems:

 

  • Core watershed research quantifies the dynamics of hydrologic, geomorphic and biogeochemical processes in forests and rangelands at multiple scales and defines the biological processes and patterns that affect the distribution, resilience, and persistence of native aquatic, riparian and terrestrial species.
  • Integrated, interdisciplinary research explores effects of climate variability and change on forest, grassland and aquatic ecosystems.

 

For more information about the Air, Water and Aquatic Environments Program, visit our scientists, research, or publications pages.

AWAE Scientists

 

Frank McCormick, AWAE Program Manager, Boise Lab

 

John Buffington, Research Geomorphologist, Boise Lab

Matthew Dare, Postdoctoral Ecologist, Boise Lab

Kate Dwire, Research Riparian Ecologist, Fort Collins Lab

Kelly Elder,  Team Leader; Research Hydrologist, Fort Collins Lab

Bill Elliot, Team Leader; Research Civil Engineer, Moscow Lab

Randy Foltz, Research Engineer, Moscow Lab

Jaime Goode, Postdoctoral Geomorphologist, Boise Lab

Robert Hubbard, Research Ecologist, Fort Collins Lab

Daniel Isaak, Fisheries Research Scientist, Boise Lab

Charlie Luce, Team Leader; Research Hydrologist, Boise Lab

Hugo Magana, Fisheries Biologist, Albuquerque Lab

Jim McKean,  Research Geomorphologist, Boise Lab

Robert Musselman, Team Leader; Research Plant Physiologist, Fort Collins Lab

David Nagel, Spatial Analyst and Physical Scientist, Boise Lab

Daniel Neary, Team Leader; Research Soil Scientist, Flagstaff Lab

Kerry Overton, Fisheries Technology Transfer Specialist, Boise Lab

Chuck Rhoades, Research Biogeochemist, Fort Collins Lab

Bruce Rieman, Emeritus Fisheries Scientist, Boise Lab

John Rinne, Emeritus Fisheries Scientist, Flagstaff Lab

Peter Robichaud, Research Engineer, Moscow Lab

Sandra Ryan-Burkett, Research Hydrologist/Geomorphologist, Fort Collins Lab

Russ Thurow, Team Leader; Research Fisheries Scientist, Boise Lab

Joe Wagenbrenner, Engineer, Moscow Lab

Natalie Wagenbrenner, Engineer, Moscow Lab

Michael Young, Team Leader; Research Fisheries Biologist, Missoula Lab

 

Entire AWAE Staff Directory | AWAE "Go To" Scientists document (PDF)

Research Subject Areas

 

AWAE Scientists cover a wealth of different subject areas with much collaboration between specialties. Find AWAE research products, scientists and projects by subject area!

 

Quick Jump to:
bulletAquatic Ecology bulletEngineering bulletHydrology bulletSpatial Analysis
bulletAtmospheric Sciences bulletFire & Fuels bulletPlant Physiology bulletWater & Watershed Processes
bulletBiogeochemistry bulletFisheries

bulletSoils

bulletClimate Change bulletGeomorphology bulletSediment & Erosion  

 

ecology image of a bird

 

Aquatic Ecology
The interdisciplinary scientific study of the distribution and abundance of organisms and their interactions with their aquatic environment (external abiotic and biotic factors). Ecology is a subdiscipline of Biology, which is the study of life. The most prevalent research topics in Aquatic Ecology here at AWAE include: Bark Beetle research, invasive species, restoration ecology, fire ecology, riparian environments and more.


Scientists & Collaborators: Kate Dwire, Robert

Hubbard, Claire McGrath

 

Subject Categories: Fisheries, Vertebrates & Invertebrates, Invasive Species, Stream Temperature.

 

 

atmospheric science image

Atmospheric Sciences

Atmospheric science is the study of the atmosphere - the blanket of air covering the Earth. Atmospheric scientists study the atmosphere's physical characteristics, motions, processes, and the way in which these factors affect the rest of our environment.


Scientists & Collaborators: Jaime Goode, Robert Hubbard, Dan Isaak, Charlie Luce, Jim McKean, Bob Musselman, Chuck

Rhoades, Bruce Rieman

 

Subject Categories: Air Quality, Atmospheric Deposition, Ozone, Climate Change
 
Biogeochemistry: Burned landscape

Biogeochemistry
Biogeochemistry is the scientific study of the processes and reactions (chemical, physical, geological, biological) which control the composition of the natural environment. It also looks at the cycles of matter and energy that transfer the Earth’s chemical components in time and space.


Biogeochemists: Chuck Rhoades

 

Subject Categories: Aquatic Ecology, Atmospheric Sciences, Climate Change, Water & Watershed Processes

 

 
Climate Change image

Climate Change

Climate Change refers to the gradual shift in earth's overall temperature and weather patterns through time. Alarming trends toward a rapidly warming climate have AWAE scientists researching the destructive effects of climate change on the Aquatic Environment. Such research involves stream temperature, wildland fires, thermal habitats, air quality and ozone to name a few.


Scientists & Collaborators: Kelly Elder, Jaime Goode, Dan Isaak, Charlie Luce, Jim McKean, Bruce Rieman

 

Subject Categories: Air Quality, Fire & Fuels, Fisheries, Stream Temperature, Watershed Processes

 

 

 

 
Engineering image

Engineering
Engineering applies technical, scientific, and mathematical knowledge in using natural laws and physical resources to design and create materials, structures, machines, devices, systems, and processes in order to accomplish a desired objective. Engineers within AWAE work with soil and water research, aquatic probability and prediction modelling, erosion control materials and other mitigation techniques, fire behavior models, etc.


Scientists & Collaborators: Bill Elliot, Randy Foltz, Peter Robichaud, Joe Wagenbrenner, Natalie Wagenbrenner

 

Subject Categories: Sediment & Erosion, Watershed Processes

 

 
fire image

Fire & Fuels
Wildland fires in the arid west create a cause for concern for many inhabitants and an area of interest for researchers. With AWAE, fundamental and applied research relates to atmospheric effects of fire on aquatic environments, and ecological adaptations to fire as well as the development of associated knowledge tools and applications for both scientists and managers in wildfire management.


Scientists & Collaborators: John Buffington, Kate Dwire, Bill Elliot, Randy Foltz, Dan Isaak, Charlie Luce, Dan Neary, Chuck Rhoades, Bruce Rieman, John Rinne, Peter Robichaud, Joe Wagenbrenner, Natalie Wagenbrenner, Michael Young

 

Subject Categories: Aquatic Ecology, Climate Change, Stream Temperature
 
Bull Trout image for fisheries

Fisheries
RMRS Fisheries research looks at watershed processes and aquatic ecology to guide management of aquatic ecosystems and water/soil resources. Scientists develop knowledge of the biophysical conditions and processes that influence water quality and quantity, aquatic habitat quality, and the distribution, diversity, and persistence of fish and other aquatic species.


Scientists & Collaborators: Dan Isaak, Hugo Magana,Bruce Rieman, John Rinne, Russ Thurow, Michael Young

 

Subject Categories: Climate Change, Invasive Species, Stream Temperature

 

 
Geomorphology image

Geomorphology
Geomorphology is the science that deals with relief features of the earth or of another celestial body and looks towards describing and classifying such topographic characteristics. This interdisciplinary subject works within AWAE with such subjects as soil, climate change, road erosion, hydrology, engineering and more.


Scientists & Collaborators: John Buffington, Jaime Goode, Jim McKean, Sandra Ryan-Burkett

 

Subject Categories:

 

 
hydrology image

Hydrology
Hydrology is the scientific discipline concerned with the waters of the Earth, with their occurrence, distribution, and circulation by means of the hydrologic cycle and relations with living things. It also deals with the chemical and physical properties of water in all its phases. This field focuses greatly on snow hydrology, stream-riparian environments, soils, erosion, climate change, wildfire, geomorphology, etc.


Scientists & Collaborators: Kelly Elder,Tom Black, Charlie Luce, Sandra Ryan-Burkett

 

Subject Categories: Watershed Processes

 

 
plant physiology aerial photograph

Plant Physiology
Plant physiology is the study of internal plant activities including phytochemistry, environmental interactions, plant morphology, molecular and cell biology, and cellular interactions. Such AWAE research studies eco-physiology, fire effects, nutrition, plant regeneration and recovery, etc.


Scientists: Robert Musselman

 

Subject Categories: Atmospheric Science

 

 
soil research

Soils, Sediment & Erosion
The study of soil as a natural resource on the surface of the earth including soil formation, classification and mapping; physical, chemical, biological, and fertility properties of soils; and these properties in relation to the use and management of soils. AWAE scientists study soil erosion: mitigation techniques, prediction and processes; fire and fuel effects, soil carbon decomposition rates and climate change, and more.


Scientists & Collaborators: Dan Neary

 

Subject Categories: Roads, Waterways, Hydrology, Watershed Processes
 
GIS and DEM image

Spatial Analysis
Spatial Analysis involves the processing of multiple geographic themes to help understand new relationships among features on the landscape. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Remote Sensing (RS) are the primary disciplines that support Spatial Analysis. At AWAE, GIS and RS are used in numerous applications such as modeling sediment yield from roads, estimating soil erosion rates, predicting stream temperatures, and mapping aquatic habitat.


Scientists & Collaborators: David Nagel, Sharon Parkes, Jim McKean, Tom Black, Charlie Luce

 

Subject Interests: River Bathymetry, Remote Sensing: Channels, GRAIP: Road Impacts, Stream Temperature

 

 
stream

Water & Watershed Processes
A riparian area is the interface between land and a stream. Soil conservation occurs in these biodiversified aquatic ecosystems. They can flourish in grassland, woodland, wetland, or even non-vegetative zones. AWAE stream riparian research looks at water availability and quality, aquatic ecosystems; species distribution, diversity and persistence, aquatic resources in society, management and livestock grazing, fire effects, climate change and natural disturbances, dams/water diversions and more.


Scientists & Collaborators:

(see page for full list)

 

Subject Categories: Disturbance, Stream Temperature, Water Quality, Roads, LiDAR, Climate Change, Hydrology, Geomorphology, Erosion.

AWAE Field Unit Locations

 

Research Field Unit Locations located throughout the interior west each contribute to the AWAE science program research. 

AWAE Field Unit Locations Map

Albuquerque Lab, Boise Lab, Flagstaff Lab, Fort Collins Lab, Missoula Lab, Moscow Lab

All Research Field Unit Locations including experimental forests

Technology Transfer

 

Technology Transfer Program Flowchart

 

 

 

AWAE Technology Transfer focuses on improving the communication between researchers and practitioners/managers to meet two primary objectives:

  1. Provide timely awareness and delivery of relevant knowledge, technical tools and procedures to assist land managers and practitioners address current and emerging fisheries/aquatic issues.

  2. Ensure researchers and practitioners/managers were working together to define knowledge gaps and needed research, tools and procedures.

 
Briefing Papers

 

These two page summaries are packed with information on finalized research products and publications.
   
 

Air Quality in Mountain Ecosystems - Ozone

 

Assessing Environmental Impacts of Dam Operation

 

Bayesian Belief Network Decision Support Tool

 

Bull Trout and Climate Change

 

Bull Trout Monitoring

 

Clean Water - Insect Outbreaks and Watersheds

 

Climate Change & Wildfires: Effects on Stream Temperatures

 

Climate Change, Water, and Aquatic Ecosystems

 

Detecting Mobile Boreal Toads

 

Fire, Fuel Management, and Aquatic Ecosystems

 

Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences Technology Transfer Program

 

GRAIP: Quantifying and Prioritizing Road Impacts

 

Hyporheic Exchange in Gravel Bed Rivers with Pool-Riffle Morphology

 

In-Stream Wood Studies: Call for Common Metrics

 

Invasive Species Managing for Native Trout

 

Nonnative Fish Removal

 

Remotely Assessing and Monitoring Channel Physical Habitat

 

Sediment Impacts from Debris Flows

 

Spatial and Temporal Variation in Chinook Redd Distributions

 

Stream Temperature Modeling

 

Water Resources Availability Trends & History

 

Western US Stream Flow Metric Dataset

Products Models & Tools

 

Quick Jump To:

Soil, Water & Erosion Fire Resource, Data & Analysis

bulletRoad Impacts

bulletWater Erosion Prediction

bulletErosion Risk Management

bulletFire Runoff & Gully Initiation

bulletSoil & Water Tools

bulletWildland Fire Behavior

bulletFire Behavior & Growth

bulletFire Climatology & Occurrence Analysis

bulletFire Behavior Mapping

bulletFire Weather Website

bulletFire Modeling Institute

bulletAnalyzing Rating Judgments

bulletError Check Microsatellites

bulletInsect & Disease Population

bulletBark Beetle Research

Resource, Management & Use

 

Water & Air

bulletHabitat Suitability Index

bulletPlanning: Economic Analysis

bulletVegetation/Road Activities

bulletLandscape Patterns & Processes simulation

bulletWatershed Effects of Management Activities

bulletRiver Bathymetry Toolkit

bulletStream Temperature

bulletSoil & Water Tools

bulletStream Flow Metric Dataset

 


 

 

 

Road Erosion image

 

 

Soil, Water & Erosion


GRAIP- Quantifying and Prioritizing Road Impacts

Forest roads are the principle source of anthropogenic fine sediment entering streams on Forest Service lands.  How do we efficiently locate, quantify and prioritize these sediment sources for remediation?

Briefing Paper   |   GRAIP Website

WEPP: Water Erosion Prediction Project

FS WEPP is a set of interfaces designed to allow users to quickly evaluate erosion and sediment delivery potential from forest roads. The erosion rates and sediment delivery are predicted by the Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP) model, using input values for forest conditions developed by scientists at the Rocky Mountain Research Station. WEPP Interfaces Home

 

 

 

ERMiT: Erosion Risk Management Tool

ERMiT allows users to predict the probability of a given amount of sediment delivery from the base of a hillslope following variable burns on forest, rangeland, and chaparral conditions in each of five years following wildfires.

ERMiT. Ermit Tool

 

  FERGI: Fire Enhanced Runoff and Gully Initiation Model

 

FERGI estimates the probability of runoff generation amounts and gully initiation positions on hillslopes after fire and after mitigations, such as contour felled logs, are applied. It uses stochastically generated weather time series as inputs to determine the probability of particular outcomes. It reports return intervals for runoff generation rates and totals, how high up the hillslope gullies will initiate, and the changes that might be expected with treatment

To use the FERGI model, visit the FERGI model website.

 

 
 

 

Fire Image

Fire


BehavePlus, a software application to predict wildland fire behavior for fire management purposes, from the Fire Behavior group at the Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory.

 

FARSITE, a software simulator of fire behavior and growth, from the Fire Behavior group at the Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory.

 

 

FireFamily Plus, a software application combining the fire climatology and occurrence analysis capabilities of the PCFIRDAT, PCSEASON, FIRES, and CLIMATOLOGY programs into a single package, from the Fire Behavior group at the Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory.

 

 

FlamMap, a fire behavior mapping and analysis software application that computes potential fire behavior characteristics, from the Fire Behavior group at the Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory.

 

Fire Weather website

, supporting the RMRS Rocky Mountain Center development and deployment of real-time computer applications for fire-weather intelligence and smoke dispersion forecasts over the Western USA. Developed by the Natural Resource Assessment, Ecology, and Management Science Research group at the Rocky Mountain Research Station.

 

  Fire Modeling Institute website, providing assistance with fire-related planning, research, practical applications of fire management tools, and finding or ordering scientific literature. The Institute includes highly skilled fire professionals and information specialists at the Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory who are available to help managers and scientists with a wide range of fire-related needs.

 

 

 

Bark Beetle Image

Resource Data & Analysis


RMRATE

, a software application for analyzing rating judgments, useful to practitioners needing to summarize or analyze rating data, and to researchers interested in comparing and evaluating alternative scaling methods. Available from the Identification and Valuation Of Wildland Resource Benefits group at the Rocky Mountain Research Station.

 

 

DROPOUT, a software application to error check microsatellite datasets for potential genotyping errors, from the Wildlife Habitats group at the Missoula Forestry Sciences Laboratory.

 

 

FINDIT, a software application for analyzing insect and disease population information taken during stand surveys, from the Logan Forestry Sciences Laboratory.

 

  Bark Beetle data, tables and spreadsheet related to bark beetle research from the Logan Forestry Sciences Laboratory.

 

 

 

Photo Credit: Economic Aspects of Forest Management on Public Lands Program Website

Resource Management & Use


ArcHSI (Arc Habitat Suitability Index)

, a geographical information system (GIS) model that estimates the ability of an area to meet the food and cover requirements of an animal species, from the Center for Great Plains Ecosystem Research group at the Rapid City Forestry Sciences Laboratory.

 

PLATA, a software application for doing economic analysis of a planning project, from the Economic Aspects of Forest Management on Public Lands group at the Missoula Forestry Sciences Laboratory.

 

 

MAGIS, a software spatial decision support system for scheduling a variety of vegetation treatments and road-related activities including construction, reconstruction, and obliteration. It is also available in an EXPRESS version, structured primarily as a timber harvest-road access tool. Available from the Economic Aspects of Forest Management on Public Lands group at the Missoula Forestry Sciences Laboratory.

 

 

SIMPPLLE, a software application designed to simulate patterns and processes at landscape scales from the Ecology and Management of Northern Rocky Mountain Forests group at the Missoula and Bozeman Forestry Sciences Laboratories.

 

  WATSED, a computer model to assess cumulative watershed effects of past, present, and future management activities, from the Economic Aspects of Forest Management on Public Lands group at the Missoula Forestry Sciences Laboratory.
 

 

 

 

River Bathymetry Toolkit Icon

Water & Air


River Bathymetry Toolkit (RBT)

Traditional techniques for describing and understanding aquatic physical habitat in streams have focused on manual measurements of channel topography. New remote sensing techniques, such as airborne water-penetrating Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) and boat-mounted acoustic sensors can produce highly accurate Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) with continuous coverage of long segments of channels and stream networks. The US Forest Service and ESSA Technologies have developed a suite of GIS tools, the River Bathymetry Toolkit (RBT), for processing high resolution DEMs of channels. Our goal is to characterize in-stream and floodplain geomorphology to support aquatic habitat analyses and numerical models of flow and sediment transport. The (RBT) is available for free and is under active development.

-River Bathymetry Toolkit (RBT)

 

 

Stream Temperature Modeling and Monitoring

Designed to assist users to better organize and understand their temperature data as it pertains to broad-scale aquatic habitat issues, the stream temperature modeling and monitoring website contains information on collecting, processing, and archiving stream temperature data. Application of these data are highlighted in three research projects that provide a range of modeling alternatives and predictive accuracy. Each project has

Stream Temperature Readings in Big Deer Creek, Idaho 2002
links to: primary publications; detailed methods and metadata; GIS layers; project data; maps; and other related materials. These sites provide more information than is traditionally available in a journal article so that the modeling approaches and results may easily be replicated.
 

Modeling Software, for erosion, fire effects, slope stability and climate, from the Soil and Water Engineering group at the Moscow Forestry Sciences Laboratory.

 

 

Western US Stream Flow Metric Dataset - A dataset of modeled flow metrics for streams in major river basins of the Western US for historical and future climate change scenarios.

 

 

Research Subject Areas

 

AQUATIC ENVIRONMENTS AND....

 

bulletAquatic Ecology

bulletAtmospheric Sciences

bulletBiogeochemistry

bulletClimate Change

bulletEngineering

bulletFire & Fuels

bulletFisheries

bulletGeomorphology

bulletHydrology

bulletPlant Physiology

bulletSediment & Erosion

bulletSpatial Analysis

bulletWater & Watershed Processes

 

 

Resources

NEW: NorWeST Stream Temperature- Regional Database and Model

 

Upper Verde River: Review of Stream-Riparian Monitoring Efforts Conducted by the U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station

 

Western US Stream Flow Metric Dataset

 

Stream Temperature Modeling and Monitoring Website

 

River Bathymetry Toolkit (RBT)

 

Bull Trout and Climate Change - Risks, Uncertainties and Opportunities for Mapping the Future

 

Technology Transfer Program

 

Western Watersheds and Climate Change Workshop - November 17-19, 2009

 


Rocky Mountain Research Station - Air, Water and Aquatic Environments Sciences Program
Last Modified:  Tuesday, 14 May 2013 at 13:28:40 EDT 13 May, 2013

USDA logo which links to the department's national site. Forest Service logo which links to the agency's national site.