Water Supply and Demand

Nathan Allen

Nathan
Allen
Title: 
Assistant Staff Scientist and Sustainability Coordinator, Biosphere 2
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Related Departments, Schools or Colleges and/or Program(s): 
Education: 
MA, Environmental Education, The University of Arizona, 2008
Phone: 
(520) 838-6168

My work focuses on responding to climate change by integrating distributed energy and water (watergy) infrastructure technologies. This may include distributed solar generation, rainwater catchment systems, smart grid, and environmental forecasting. The Biosphere 2 campus infrastructure serves as a Model City laboratory these large-scale experiments and demonstration of sustainable technologies and management strategies.

Young-Jun Son

Young-Jun
Son
Title: 
Professor, Department of Systems and Industrial Engineering
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Professor, School of Sustainable Engineered Systems
Related Departments, Schools or Colleges and/or Program(s): 
Education: 
PhD, Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, 2000.
Phone: 
(520) 626-9530
Photo of Young-Jun Son

Modeling (simulation and optimization) and Management of Distributed Solar and Wind generators, Storage, Water Desalination, and Environment.

Young-Jun Son is a Professor in Systems and Industrial Engineering and Director of Advanced Integration of Manufacturing Systems and Technologies (AIMST) Center. His research focuses on the coordination of a data-driven, multi-scale, networked-federated simulation and decision model needed for design and control in various applications, including renewable energy network, water-environment-energy nexus, extended manufacturing enterprise, homeland security, l and social network. He has received several research awards such as the Society of Manufacturing Engineers 2004 Outstanding Young Manufacturing Engineer Award, the Institute of Industrial Engineers 2005 Outstanding Young Industrial Engineer Award, the IERC Conference Best Paper Awards (2005, 2008, 2009), and Best Paper of the Year Award in 2007 from International Journal of Industrial Engineering.

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Lily
A
House-Peters
Photo of Lily A House-Peters
Degree Program: 
phd
Primary Department/Unit: 
Other Departments or Unit Affiliations: 

My research interests focus on the complex interactions and feedbacks between social, technological, and ecological systems, which effectively influence water supply, demand, wastewater disposal and reuse, and inequities in the distribution of water resources. I am interested in better understanding how human decision-making, across and between multiple social, political, economic, and legal hierarchies, directly and indirectly affects the urban hydrological cycle at differing temporal scales.

Topic or title of your dissertation/thesis: 

My dissertation research examines the impact of large-scale, centralized water infrastructure investments on water security, adaptive management capacity, and vulnerability to climate variability, including drought and flood, in urban Australia.

Advisor(s): 
Expected Graduation Date: 
May, 2014

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Shannon
E
McNeil
Photo of Shannon E. McNeil
Degree Program: 
msc

I am interestd in the effects of habitat fragmentation and isolation on avian dispersal, and how to improve current habitat restoration practices within the current agricultural landscape. I am developing genetic markers in yellow-billed cuckoos as a tool to measure current western riparian connectivity.

Topic or title of your dissertation/thesis: 

Yellow-billed cuckoo Coccyzus americanus population genetics within a fragmented landscape.

Advisor(s): 
Expected Graduation Date: 
December, 2012

Raymon M Turner

Raymon
M
Turner
Title: 
Affiliate, Geosciences Department
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Botanist, U. S. Geological Survey (retired)
Affiliate Faculty, Institute of the Environment
Related Departments, Schools or Colleges and/or Program(s): 
Education: 
Ph. D. Washington State University, 1954
Phone: 
(520) 326-6042
Photo of Raymon Turner

I have been studying the plant ecology of our region since 1954, when I began teaching at the University of Arizona. I later joined the U. S. Geological Survey. I have coauthered several books. Among them, The Changing Mile (1965), The Changing Mile Revisited (2003), Bibliography of Repeat Photography for Evaluating Landscape Change (1984), The Ribbon of Green:Change in Riparian Vegetation in the Southwester United States (2007), Sonoran Desert Plants: An Ecological Atlas (1995), Repeat Photography:Methods and Applications in the Natural Sciences (2010),  Kenya's Changing Landscape (1998).

My interest lies in the dynamics of the region's vegetation with a drive for determining the causes for the changes.

Environmental Themes: 

Joel A Biederman

Joel
A
Biederman
Photo of Joel Biederman
Degree Program: 
phd
Primary Department/Unit: 

Joel's training is in civil and environmental engineering, with specialization in natural systems for wastewater treatment.  After a stint teaching high school science and math, Joel has returned to school seeking greater understanding of the water resources issues facing the West under the dual pressures of climate change and population growth.  He is particularly intersted in the translation of scientific results for application by decision makers.  Joel's present reserach seeks to describe the effects of Mountain Pine Beetle infestation on mountain catchments, where the much of the West's water falls as snow. 

Topic or title of your dissertation/thesis: 

Joel is organizing his disseration research around the following questions:

Topic:  Impacts of Mountain Pine Beetle Infestation On the Hydrology of Mountain Catchments

  • How do snow water inputs to mountain catchments vary with severity of and time since infestation?
  • How does MPB infestation impact plot scale and catchment scale biogeochemistry?
  • How can water managers water policy professionals apply emerging MPB research results for improved decision making? 
Advisor(s): 
Expected Graduation Date: 
May, 2014

Danny Shahar

Danny
Shahar
Photo of Danny Shahar
Degree Program: 
phd
Primary Department/Unit: 
Other Departments or Unit Affiliations: 
Minor Program: 

I came to the University of Arizona in the Fall of 2009.  I have a BA in philosophy from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where I wrote my senior honors thesis under Harry Brighouse on the implications of global climate change for individual rights.  I have also worked as a researcher for Iridian Asset Management, LLC., focusing in part on emerging technologies in the energy industry. 

I currently work in environmental philosophy, with a strong inclination towards interdisciplinary research.  My research interests involve on a number of different subjects:

  • The psychological mechanisms underlying environmental concern, the evolutionary functions of those mechanisms, and the potential challenges for environmental ethics in the exaptation of these mechanisms for their new roles in our moral psychology.
  • The roles of romantic, not-all-things-considered viewpoints in our moral psychology and in our all-things-considered ethical positions.
  • The relationship between Hayekian market liberalism and environmentalist arguments for protecting or preserving natural systems due to their instrumental importance and complexity.
  • The history of thought regarding natural resource scarcity, fragility, and complexity.
  • Virtue-ethical approaches to thinking about collective responsibility

As one might expect, I am not nearly an expert on all of these areas.  But if you are interested in thinking about some of these issues (or don't know what they mean), I would love to hear from you!

Advisor(s): 
Expected Graduation Date: 
January, 2014

North American Monsoon Paleoclimatology from Tree Rings

Daniel
Griffin
Photo of Daniel Griffin
Degree Program: 
phd
Primary Department/Unit: 
Other Departments or Unit Affiliations: 
Minor Program: 

I am an environmental scientist working on issues of climate, water, hazards, and natural resources management. A Ph.D. candidate at the University of Arizona in Tucson, I am majoring in Geography and minoring in Global Change. My mentor and advisor is Dr. Connie A. Woodhouse. My research appointment is with the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research. I am affiliated with the Climate Assessment for the Southwest and the UA Institute of the Environment. My graduate studies are supported by a U.S. EPA STAR Fellowship.

Topic or title of your dissertation/thesis: 

Tree-ring reconstructions of North American monsoon variability in the southwestern U.S.

Expected Graduation Date: 
May, 2013

Connie Woodhouse

Connie
Woodhouse
Title: 
Associate Professor, Geography and Development
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Associate Professor, Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research
Associate Professor, Geosciences
Affiliate Faculty, Institute of the Environment
Education: 
Ph.D., Geosciences, University of Arizona, 1996.
Phone: 
(520) 626-0235
Photo of Connie Woodhouse

Connie Woodhouse's research concerns the climatology of western North America, including paleoclimatic reconstructions of past climate and hydrologic conditions from tree rings, the analysis of past and current climate, and circulation features that influence climate, particularly at decadal and longer time scales. Her work has ranged from the reconstruction and analysis of drought in the western Great Plain, to temperature variability over the past eight centuries in western North America, to the development of a network of streamflow reconstructions for major rivers in the Colorado, Platte, and Rio Grande river basins. A recent emphasis has been on applied research to assist water resource managers in using reconstructions of past hydroclimatic variability in drought planning and water resource management.

Environmental Themes: 

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