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Bosque del Apache Field Site

Caption:

Collecting a ground water sample in a saltcedar (Tamarix ramosissima) stand at the Bosque del Apache field site in New Mexico.

The Bosque del Apache site is one of several field sites used for research by Ph.D. students enrolled in the Freshwater Sciences Interdisciplinary Doctoral program, a collaborative effort between the University of Alabama and the University of New Mexico. The program is funded by NSF's Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) program, NSF grant DGE 99-72810. [See related images: Water Lily Species Nymphaea odorata and Talladega Wetland Field Site.]

More about this Image NSF's Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training program supports activities like the Freshwater Sciences Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program. The overall purpose of the freshwater sciences program was to provide Ph.D. students with the opportunity to prepare for careers that would effectively address the issue of how to maintain high-quality fresh water in the 21st century. The program emphasized interdisciplinary areas of aquatic ecology, environmental geology, and hydrology.

Both of the universities that participated in the program had a designated field site where students were able to take samples and perform field research. The sites were located at similar latitudes but with contrasting humid/wet and semi-arid climates. Students were able to broaden their perspectives by designing components of their dissertation research that were cross-regional and that allowed them to explore similarities and differences in approaches and questions in geographic regions with distinctly different climates.

The students investigated ecological, hydrological, and geochemical attributes of streams, rivers, and ground waters of the Mobile River and Middle Rio Grande basins. They formed links with organizations like the South Florida Water Management District, Everglades National Park, the Nature Conservancy, and the Bosque Improvement Group, which are involved in large-scale management and restoration of major southeastern and southwestern freshwater ecosystems. Students and faculty from both universities would confer and meet regularly, share research results, and compare field research.

Bosque del Apache Field Site
(Preview Only)

Credit: University of New Mexico Hydrogeoecology Group
Year of Image: 1998

Categories:

BIOLOGICAL / Ecological

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Restrictions:

No additional restrictions--beyond NSF's general restrictions--have been placed on this image. For a list of general restrictions that apply to this and all images in the NSF Image Library, see the section "Conditions".

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Last Modified: Mar 29, 2001