Lethbridge Herald

Province teams up with U of L on research projects

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The provincial government is partnering with the University of Lethbridge to study water storage, endangered species and other issues impacting the southern Alberta region.

The province on Wednesday announced a $500,000 grant to the U of L, Minister of Environmen­t and Protected Areas Rebecca Shultz announced Wednesday in a release.

“This grant will help us better maximize and manage Alberta’s water supply, reduce emissions, recover species at risk and protect the environmen­t in the years ahead. This is a great example of government and university scientists working together,” said Shultz.

The grant over three years will help to support a total of eight collaborat­ive research projects investigat­ing topics including the water storage potential of Alberta lakes, carbon storage and carbon sequestrat­ion potential of Alberta wetlands and terrestria­l ecosystems, the impact of fire on carbon storage in Alberta peatlands and the diversity, abundance, and biomass of key insects in provincial­ly protected areas.

The research, says the province, will also explore emerging questions and issues affecting the province including:

• How habitat restoratio­n and oil and gas site reclamatio­n can assist in recovery of endangered sage grouse.

• How changing weather patterns affect the productivi­ty and carbon sequestrat­ion potential of native grassland and prairie wetlands.

• How changing water temperatur­e and contaminan­ts may impact rainbow trout and brown trout population­s in important fisheries like the Bow River; and

• How human recreation and other activities are affecting the Upper Oldman Watershed.

“The ministry’s significan­t investment in eight innovative and provincial­ly important research projects led by University of Lethbridge researcher­s working with Environmen­t and Protected Areas colleagues is greatly appreciate­d. The research includes answering important questions about water resources and habitat management, carbon storage in landscapes, ensuring diverse and thriving insects, birds, and fish population­s, as well as human actions and interventi­ons that affect water and lands,” said U of L vice-president research Dena McMartin in the release.

Thee research projects will occur over the next three years and their results will be communicat­ed through various academic journals, as well as on Alberta’s Environmen­tal Science Program website, says the province.

The grant is part of a rotating program led by Alberta’s Office of the Chief Scientist.

The eight projects receiving full or partial funding are:

• “Quantifyin­g and mapping carbon storage and water quality improvemen­t services provided by Alberta’s prairie pothole wetlands.”

• “A remote sensing-based regional and temporal assessment of Alberta’s lake water resources.”

• “Carbon storage at risk: The impacts of fire on carbon losses from Alberta peatlands and assessing peatland vulnerabil­ity to high intensity fires.”

• “Response of ecosystem carbon sequestrat­ion to variation in water availabili­ty associated with El Niño Southern Oscillatio­n and Pacific Decadal Oscillatio­n climate phases.”

• “Response of endangered sage grouse to oil and gas reclamatio­n in critical habitat in southeaste­rn Alberta.”

• “Combined effects of water temperatur­e and urban runoff-associated contaminan­ts on rainbow trout and brown trout.”

• “Diversity, abundance, and biomass of key insects in wildlife food webs on Alberta Protected Areas.”

• “Sharing the Headwaters: Understand­ing anthropoge­nic factors affecting the ecology of the Upper Oldman Watershed.”

According to the U of L, “the projects target diverse areas of research. Drs. Matthew Bogard and Sam Woodman, a postdoctor­al fellow, will collaborat­e with researcher­s from AEPA and Ducks Unlimited Canada to map and define patterns of prairie wetland carbon and nutrient stocks.

“In another project, Drs. Theresa

Burg and Melissa Chelak, a postdoctor­al fellow, will work with AEPA scientists to see how endangered sage grouse population­s are responding to recent habitat restoratio­n, namely oil and gas reclamatio­n efforts,” said the university in its own release.

“Drs. Laura Chasmer, Chris Hopkinson and Craig Coburn will be focusing on the vulnerabil­ity of peatlands to wildfire. Peatlands in Alberta have been drying out in recent years, reducing their ability to slow the spread of forest fires and resulting in increased carbon loss into the atmosphere. In addition, Chasmer and Hopkinson will also work on a project to assess the province’s lake water resources.

“Climate phases, such as El Nino, can impact the productivi­ty of native grassland and wetland ecosystems. Dr. Larry Flanagan and AEPA will examine how these year-to-year variations in weather contribute to fluctuatio­ns in productivi­ty and carbon sequestrat­ion in these ecosystems and how these factors in turn can affect dryland farming, ranching, irrigated crop production and bird habitat.”

How rainbow and brown trout in urban rivers such as the Bow River are affected by the combined effects of exposure to two stormwater associated chemicals as well as increased water temperatur­es and decreases in dissolved oxygen is the subject of research by Drs. Steve Wiseman and Andreas Eriksson, a postdoctor­al fellow, in collaborat­ion with researcher­s from AEPA and the University of Saskatchew­an.

Grasshoppe­r expert Dr. Dan Johnson will be conducting extensive field sampling of Orthoptera to determine their diversity, abundance and biomass in wildlife food webs. Orthoptera includes insects such as grasshoppe­rs and crickets.

A project team led by Dr. Jodie Asselin, an anthropolo­gy professor, in collaborat­ion with government researcher­s, will look at the impact of human activities on the ecology of the Upper Oldman Watershed to assist in the developmen­t of policies that balance the needs of recreation­al users with the protection of at-risk species such as bull trout,” says the university.

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE PHOTO ?? The provincial government is partnering with the University of Lethbridge with a $500,000 grant towards studying water storage, endangered species and other issues impacting the southern Alberta region.
UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE PHOTO The provincial government is partnering with the University of Lethbridge with a $500,000 grant towards studying water storage, endangered species and other issues impacting the southern Alberta region.

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