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- Artificial wetlands (1)
- Constructed wastewater treatment wetlands (1)
- Drinking water (1)
- Effluent quality (1)
- Engineered wetlands (1)
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- Environmental quality (1)
- Fire management (1)
- Fire recovery (1)
- Flood plain ecosystems (1)
- Las Vegas (Nev.) (1)
- Low-elevation riparian ecosystems (1)
- Lower Colorado River (1)
- Reclamation of water (1)
- Salix gooddingii (1)
- Salt-Cedar (1)
- Stomatal conductance (1)
- Tamarix ramosissima (1)
- Wastewater wetlands (1)
- Willow (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Southern Nevada Effluent Wetlands: A Proposed Cooperative Venture Between The Bureau Of Reclamation & City Of Las Vegas, Bureau Of Reclamation
Southern Nevada Effluent Wetlands: A Proposed Cooperative Venture Between The Bureau Of Reclamation & City Of Las Vegas, Bureau Of Reclamation
Publications (WR)
Throughout North America there is a growing interest in constructed wetlands, both as relatively inexpensive, low-maintenance systems for removing nutrients from wastewater, and as a means of using municipal wastewater to enhance wildlife habitat and create public use opportunities. Because wetlands appear to have good potential as a component in the overall management of scarce water resources, the Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) has undertaken several cooperative research and demonstration projects to evaluate their effectiveness in a variety of local environments.
While a number of projects have demonstrated that wetlands can be beneficially employed to improve water quality, few such projects …
Fire In A Riparian Shrub Community: Postburn Water Relations In The Tamarix-Salix Association Along The Lower Colorado River, S. D. Smith, D. E. Busch
Fire In A Riparian Shrub Community: Postburn Water Relations In The Tamarix-Salix Association Along The Lower Colorado River, S. D. Smith, D. E. Busch
Life Sciences Faculty Research
Higher water potentials in recovering burned salt-cedar (Tamarix ramosissima) relative to unburned plants and the opposite situation in willow (Salix gooddingii) provide evidence that postfire water stress is reduced in the former but not the latter. Similarly, diurnal patterns of stomatal conductance in these taxa are consistent with the existence of more vigor in burned salt-cedar than willow. Plots of water potential and transpiration demonstrate that hydraulic efficiencies may contribute to differences in fire recovery.