Skip to content.
|
Skip to navigation
Visit Our Companion Sites:
All About Watershed
After Wildfire Guide
NMFWRI
Search Site
Search
only in current section
Advanced Search…
Navigation
Home
About
News & Events
Announcements
Library
Groups
AAW Partners
Help
Personal tools
Register
Log in
You are here:
Home
Info
Search results
19
items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Sort by
relevance
·
date (newest first)
·
alphabetically
Our Land: Record Low Snowpack In New Mexico
From 02/09/18 New Mexico In Focus broadcast: This month on “Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future,” we head to Sandia Peak—and learn what’s missing up there right now. With Kerry Jones, a warning coordination meteorologist with the National Weather Service, we learn why this year’s record-low snowpack has such big implications for New Mexicans across the state. A “water year” runs from October 1 through the end of September, and New Mexicans right now are standing at the driest start to any water year on record—that is, all the way back to the 1890s.
Located in
Library
/
News and Events Inbox
New Mexico Water Supply Update Briefing
January 26, 2018 briefing by National Weather Service Hydrologist Royce Fontenot
Located in
Library
/
News and Events Inbox
The Influence of Restoration Treatments on Hydrologic Output in Fire-Adapted Forests of the Southwest
O'Donnell, Frances C., 2016. ERI Working Paper No. 37. Ecological Restoration Institute and the Southwest Fire Science Consortium, Northern Arizona University, November 2016
Located in
Library
/
Inbox
DroughtView: Combining on-the-ground know-how with remotely sensed data to assess drought impacts
Webinar presented by Jeremy Weiss, Climate and Geospatial Extension Scientist at the University of Arizona, and hosted by the Desert Landscape Conservation Cooperative.
Located in
Library
/
News and Events Inbox
USDA kicks off webinar series on drought and water challenges
The USDA Office of Sustainability and Climate Change posted a 2-hour introduction to upcoming opportunities related to drought and water challenges. The aim is to engage Forest Service employees and partners in planning for and adapting to the impacts of drought and other water challenges in the face of a changing climate.
Located in
Library
/
News and Events Inbox
Other Federal News
U.S. Climate Resilience Toolkit Releases Water Resources as Topic Area
Located in
Library
/
Inbox
Map1 Priority Project Area Watershed Map (March 2015 )
Map 1: March 2015 Priority Project Area Watershed map shows the group's current Priority Project Area with Watershed HUC 8 (labeled), HUC 10 (not labeled), HUC 12 (labeled), Surface ownership (corrected version by Gila NF); Gila NF Priority Landscape, Grant Co 911 Roads layer; Tiger 2010 surface water (streams and waterbodies), GNIS Populated places, Shaded Relief image beneath all; some place names are labeled. 24"x 36" (D size), landscape, pdf
Located in
Groups
/
Grant County Eco-Watershed Planning Group
/
Public Folder
Vulnerability of riparian obligate species to the interactive effect of fire, climate and hydrological change: Final Report
Rocky Mountain Research Station, Dec. 2014
Located in
Library
/
Inbox
How hotter, dryer climate may lead to more tree deaths from fire
from SRLCC Feb. 2015 Newsletter
Located in
Library
/
Inbox
Potential Postwildfire Debris-Flow Hazards - A Prewidlfire Evaluation for the Sandia and Manzano Mountains and Surrounding Areas, Central New Mexico
USGS Scientific Investigations Report 2014-5161. Tillery, A.C., Haas, J.R., Miller, L.W., Scott, J.H., and Thompson, M.P., 2014. Prepared in cooperation with the Bernalillo County Natural Resources Services.
Located in
Library
Next 9 items »
[
1
]
2
Site Map
Accessibility
Contact