Sunday June 8th - UMass Amherst

2y ago
13 Views
2 Downloads
376.31 KB
8 Pages
Last View : 11d ago
Last Download : 3m ago
Upload by : Philip Renner
Transcription

Sunday – June 8th8:00-8:30 Short Course Registration8:30-4:30 Short Course: Succeeding With a Dam Removal Project *4:30-6:00 Ice Breaker & Conference RegistrationMonday - June 9th (Morning :2011:4012:00Track A(Capital Ballroom A)Track BTrack C(Capital Ballroom B)(Conference Room I)Registration and BreakfastTrack D(Conference Room II)Introduction and Welcome (Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)“Listening to the Song of the River: Aldo Leopold, Watersheds, and the Land Ethic”Curt Meine, Aldo Leopold Foundation / Center for Humans and Nature (Madison/WisconsinBallroom)“Large River Restoration: The Need for Science-Based Adaptive Management”Larry Weber, University of Iowa: Iowa City, Iowa (Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)BreakSession A1: Alignmenton RegionalSession C1: WaterConnectivity PrioritiesManagement toand Goals: LaunchingSession B1: Culverts:Session D1: FishwayImprove Fish Habitata Great LakesL. MauldinDesign: M. Melchiorin Dam Tailraces: T.Regional ConnectivityLyonsCollaborative I: P.DoranA. Haro; Effect ofP. McIntyre; UsingUpstream Fish Passageoptimization models toH. Santos; ThreeR. Laughery;Structure Entrancesupport barrier removaldimensional numericalEvaluating a ColumbiaDesign and Headdecisions for nativemodel of Stairs PipeRiver Dam TailraceDifferential onmigratory fishes inculvertsHabitat with CFDAttraction and Entry ofGreat Lakes tributariesAdult ShortnoseSturgeonE. Zapel; InnovativeM. Guyette; AccountingHybrid Design ofJ. Gulliver; Predictionfor invasive speciesK. Hughes; EffectiveIssaquah Creekof Total Dissolved Gaswhen prioritizingmitigation techniquesHatchery Water Supplybelow Overthroughbarrier removals infor culvertsIntake Using PhysicalSpillwaysGreat Lakes tributariesScale Modeling as aCollaborative ToolM. Politano; TamingM. Herbert; AccountingS. JanuchowskiTotal Dissolved GasR. Greif; Innovativefor the benefits:Hartley; A predictiveusing AdvancedFish Passage: A Costmapping the keymethod for quantifyingComputer SimulationsEffective Solution fortributaries for migratoryroad culvert passabilityand Reduced ScaleHigh-Head HydrofishModelsJ. Turek; Design andJ. Syms; The Effect ofK. Dolata;Construction PracticesTurbulence inImplementing StrategicK. Nichols; Newtonfor the Kenyon MillHydropower Dam FishConnectivityCreek Gets a Step UpStep-Pool Nature-likePassageways on PacificRestoration ProjectsFishway, PawcatuckLamprey PassageRiver, Rhode IslandA. Beyer; The viewN. Burnett; BurstB. Lake; The ColemanM. Yaw (M. Yaw & S.from the field – whatswimming in areas ofPond Fishway: NovelAston); Design andare the greatest policyturbulent flow: delayedsite identification,Physical Model Testingneeds and opportunitiesconsequences ofdesign, and constructionof a Bottomless Baffledto get more of this workanaerobiosis in wildof a nature-like pool andCulvertdoneadult sockeye salmonweir fishway.Lunch

Monday - June 9th (Afternoon Session I)Time1:301:502:102:302:50Track ATrack B(Capital Ballroom A)(Capital Ballroom B)Session A2: AlignmentSession B2: Referenceon RegionalReach orConnectivity PrioritiesDoppelganger? How doand Goals: Launchingwe know an analog fitsa Great Lakes Regionala restoration site orConnectivityadapt for success?: D.Collaborative II: P.RuttenbergDoranS. Sowa; The GreatM. Chelminski;Lakes IMDS: HelpingReconnaissance-Leveladvance lanscape-scaleAssessment of Damcollaboration andRemoval for Upstreamstrategic conservationFish PassageS. Allen; DesignT. Hogrefe; DevelopingChallenges usingregional goals forReference Reaches inconnectivity restorationManipulatedWatershedsM. Brouder; Toward aJ. MacBroom;shared vision andReference Reaches;strategy for improvingOpportunities andconnectivity across theLimitationsGreat Lakes basinA. Selle; ChannelRestoration during DamRemoval – Letting theP. Doran; DiscussionRiver do the Work.and closing remarksLessons from theBrown Bridge DamRemovalTrack C(Conference Room I)Track D(Conference Room II)Session C2: FishGuidance &Protection ISession D2: FishPassage Policy Aroundthe World: T.EhlingerD. Hayes; EmergencyPumping Plant FishProtection Screens atCalifornia's Red BluffDiversion DamM. Redeker; AnOverview Of The NewGerman FishwayStandard For UpstreamFish PassageU. Dumont; Installationof a pilot plant for fishprotection an bypasssystemsR. Celebi; The LegalStatus of Fish Passageand Challenges InTurkeyD. Lentz; North BattleCreek Feeder FishScreen and FishwayModelC. Bozek; GreenInfrastructure and BlueHabitat- making theconnection inMassachusettsD. Erickson; Design,Construction,Installation andOperation of ThreeLarge Scale NettingFish Barrier ProjectsJ. Hastings; DevelopingHabitat for the Wild &RareBreak

Monday - June 9th (Afternoon Session II)Track A(Capital Ballroom A)Track B(Capital Ballroom B)Track C(Conference Room I)Session A3: GreatLakes LampreyResearch, Managementand Policy I: A. SelleSession B3: FishwayMonitoring andEvaluation: T. CastroSantosSession C3: FishGuidance &Protection II: K.Mulligan3:10M. Siefkes; Great LakesFishery CommissionPolicy on Sea LampreyBarriers and DamRemovalsJoint ASCE-EWRI &AFS-BES CommitteeAward Winners3:30J. Barber; Fixed-crestsea lamprey barrierdesign and operationT. Castro-Santos;Cumulative delay andpassage performance ofsea lamprey ascendingfour fishways.Time3:504:10R. McLaughlin;Passage options forwalleye and lakesturgeon at the dam siteon the Black SturgeonRiver, Lake Superior,CanadaR. McLaughlin; Theefficacy of seasonallyoperated barriers for sealamprey control andpassage of non-targetfishesC. Bunt; UnintendedFishway Passage andTransport of Native andNon-Native Lampreys(Petromyzontidae)J. Raabe; Evaluation ofFish Passage FollowingInstallation of a RockArch Rapids at Lockand Dam #1, Cape FearRiver, North Carolina4:30N. Johnson; The questfor an effective nonphysical migrationbarrier for invasive sealampreyM. Weiland; Analysisof Multiyear AcousticTelemetry Data toAssist in DeterminingOperations atBonneville Dam on theColumbia River4:50P. Hrodey; A New Toolto Trap and SortMigrating Adult SeaLampreyL. Hahn; Fishway useand movements of giantmigratory catfishesdownstream of a largehydropower dam in theBrazilian Amazon5:105:30 to7:305:45 to6:45S. Scott; Barrier Netsfor Fish Guidance andReduction ofEntrainment at WaterIntakesS. Amaral; Evaluationof Bar Rack Spacingand Approach Velocityfor PreventingEntrainment of SilverAmerican Eels atHydropower ProjectsM. Politano; Modelingof a non-physical fishbarrierC. Gurshin (B. Lenz);Increased DownriverPassage of JuvenileBlueback Herring afterReconfiguring anUltrasonic FieldM. O’Farrell; Use ofElectric Fish GuidanceTechnology to DeterSalmonids fromEntering HydroTailraces and IntakeCanals: Two CaseStudiesTBDTrack D(Conference Room II)Session D3: StreamSimulation Design ofRoad-StreamCrossings: R.GubernickR. Gubernick; StreamSimulation Design inHigh Gradient ChannelsD. Higgins; StreamSimulation in Very LowGradient ChannelsJ. Olson; Do StreamSimulation CulvertDesigns ImproveEcosystem Function? ACase Study in NorthernWisconsinS. Eggert; Benefits ofStream SimulationDesign Culverts onBiological ProductivityM. Weinhold; StreamSimulation LessonsLearned – Case Studiesfrom Here and ThereH. Bentz; Factors toConsider WhenSelecting a Structure foran AOP DesignIntermissionPoster Session and Social (University Rooms A/B/C/D)Extended discussion: Great Lakes Connectivity Restoration (University Rooms A/B)

Tuesday – June 10th (Morning Session)TimeTrack A(Capital Ballroom A)Track B(Capital Ballroom B)Track C(Conference Room I)7:45Registration and Breakfast8:15Introductions (Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)8:309:15“Seven Rivers: Global Perspectives on Environmental Flows”Richard Beilfuss, International Crane Foundation (Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)“The Broad Implications of Connectivity”Luther Aadland, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Stream Habitat Program(Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)Break10:00Session A4: GreatLakes LampreyResearch, Managementand Policy II: A. SelleSession B4: FishPassage and FluidDynamics Modeling:M. Chelminski10:20N. Johnson;Alternatives to sealamprey barriers:pheromones andtrappingH. Santos; Fishnumerical model basedon fish behavior influmes10:40T. Neeson; Accountingfor sea lampreys in aGreat Lakes barrierremoval decisionsupport toolB. Duarte (H. Santos);Three dimensionalmultiphase CFD modelfor studies of fishbehavior: an applicationto Três Marias dam(Brazil)J. Carey; LampreyBarrier Design and FishPassage in Great LakesTributariesA. Schlindwein; The 3Dimensional Design ofMidwestern GradeControl Structures forKarman Gait FishPassage Characteristics11:00A. Amado; Anapproach to modelswimming behavior ofsmolts in the forebay ofhydro dams11:20PANEL11:4012:00Track D(Conference Room II)N. Nekouee; FishPassage Design UsingCFD ModelingSession C4: FishPassage in theMidwest and theChallenges of InvasiveSpecies and Disease:N. UtrupD. Caneff; Social andPolitical considerationsfor Fish Passage atHydro Dams in the Ageof Asian Carp andOther AISN. Frohnauer; Don'tForget the Natives!G. Whitledge; Natalenvironment andmovement of Asiancarps in the upperMississippi Riverinferred from otolithchemistryS. Tripp; Asian carpexpansion in theMississippi River:Focusing on the leadingedge of the strongholdN. Utrup; Fish passageat hydropower dams inWisconsin and concernswith invasive species,disease, andcontaminantsLunchSession D4: CaseStudies I: J. MoralesS. Arnold; Fish PassageEnhancement at YorkHaven Dam –Reconnecting theLower SusquehannaRiverP. Foote; Installation ofSuccessful CombinedDenil Fishway andEelway at Upper MysticLake, MAM. Clay (S. Milligan);Process for Selectingthe Optimum Locationfor a Juvenile FishBypass Outfall atLower Granite Lockand DamK. Martin; Fish PassageFacilities as Part of thePenobscot RiverRestoration ProjectJ. Renholds; Prototypemodifications within aflood control channel toimprove fish passage inMill Creek near WallaWalla, WA

Tuesday – June 10th (Afternoon Session I)TimeTrack A(Capital Ballroom A)Session A5: LakeSturgeon Passage onthe Menominee River I:C. Alsberg1:30J. Fossum; History ofthe Menominee Rivermulti-partner fishpassage initiative1:50R. Elliott; Habitat andpopulation basedrational for lakesturgeon passage on theMenominee River2:102:302:50Track B(Capital Ballroom B)Track C(Conference Room I)Track D(Conference Room II)Session B5:Prioritization: A.SinglerSession C5: FishPassage at WhitewaterParks: J. RathbunSession D5: CaseStudies II: T. OstingM. Kondratieff;Whitewater ParkHydraulics:Implications for FishS. Hunter; Hydraulicanalysis and riskassessment of aproposed fish barrier forJohnson Creek, Utah.R. Weiter; BarrierRemoval Prioritizationfor Stream ResidentSpecies on theWestfield River inWestern MassachusettsM. Keefer; Metrics toidentify fishwaypassage bottlenecks inthe multi-speciesColumbia RiverA. Ficke; Arewhitewater parksmovement barriers toGreat Plains fishes?M. Donofrio; GreenBay Lake SturgeonSpawning FidelityE. McCombs; Damremoval and freshwatermussels: effectiverestoration andprioritization throughcase studiesT. Stephens; Spatiallyexplicit hydraulicanalysis of the effects ofwhitewater parks onfish passageN. Utrup; Can weattract lake sturgeon toa fishway?M. Diebel; A ScreeningMethod for IdentifyingFish Passage Barriers atRoad Crossings UsingLiDAR-DerivedElevation DataJ. Conyngham;Recreational Amenitiesas Unintended PassageBarriers: HydraulicCharacterization of aWhitewater Play WaveBreakJ. Mann; Design andManagement of aMultifaceted FishPassage ImprovementProjectR. Voicu; Presentationthe history of fishladder construction inRomânia and oneconcrete frontal solutionthat can achievelongitudinalconnectivity of theCrişul Repede River. Acase studyB. Ghosh; Hydraulicimpact on fishmigration in asariakandhi fish pass ofBangladesh.

Tuesday – June 10th (Afternoon Session II)TimeTrack A(Capital Ballroom A)Session A6: LakeSturgeon Passage onthe Menominee RiverII: C. AlsbergTrack B(Capital Ballroom B)Session B6: FishMigration andMovement Studies: M.Lang3:10J. Waldrip; LakeSturgeon Passage atFive HydroelectricDams on theMenominee River3:30C. Tomichek;Estimating DownstreamPassage Efficiencies forSturgeon UnderDifferent Scenarios3:504:104:304:50W. de Bruijne; Towardsa Healthy Danube - Fishmigration at the IronGate damsR. Alsberg; A HydroOwner's Perspective onPlanning, Consultation,and Implementation ofLake Sturgeon Passageon the MenomineeD. Caneff; Multistakeholderpartnership: keys tosuccessful planning andimplementation of fishpassage from the NGOperspectivePANEL(N. Utrup; J. Fossum;D. Caneff; R. Alsberg;R. Elliott; M. Donofrio;K. Kruger; J. Waldrip;C. Tomichek)M. Kirk; Using networktheory to formulatebehavioral inferencesfrom the movementpatterns of Chinooksalmon and PacificlampreyL. Hahn; Movementsof dourado (Salminusbrasiliensis) transportedupstream of a dam in asubtropical river insouthern BrazilTrack C(Conference Room I)Track D(Conference Room II)Session C6:Downstream Passage:J. RothlisbergerM. Chelminski; Go withthe Flow: Scoping,Design, andImplementation of aDownstream FishPassage System at aFERC-LicensedHydroelectric FacilitiesT. McCarthy;Conservation ofAnguilla anguilla inIreland by trap andtransport of silver-phaseeels from sites upstreamof hydropower damsS. Amaral; DownstreamPassage SurvivalAnalysis for a ProposedHydro Project inEstoniaN. Bett; HomestreamDetection by Pink andSockeye Salmon in aRegulated River SystemD. Dixon; Alden FishFriendly HydropowerTurbine DevelopmentStatusC. Middleton; Effectsof daily varying natalolfactory cues onPacific salmonmigration success in ariver regulated byhydropower generationD. Nyqvist;Downstream Migrationof Landlocked AtlanticSalmon Kelts andsmolts in the RiverKlarälven, SwedenM. Ahmann;Employing the TSPDesign Process toDesign ReplacementTurbine Runners for theIce Harbor Lock andDamL. Hanna; Helix Designfor Downstream FishPassage5:10Intermission5:30Poster Session and Social (University Rooms A/B/C/D)6:00Banquet – Cash Bar Begins (Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)6:30Banquet - Dinner (Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)

Wednesday – June 11th (Morning :2011:4012:00Track A(Capital Ballroom A)Track BTrack CTrack D(Capital Ballroom B)(Conference Room I)(Conference Room II)Registration and BreakfastIntroductions (Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)“Decisions for the Dammed in an Uncertain World”Rob McLaughlin, University of Guelph: Ontario, Canada (Madison/Wisconsin Ballroom)Paul Kemp, University of Southampton: Southampton, United Kingdom (Madison/WisconsinBallroom)BreakSession A7: Movementsof Native and InvasiveSession C7: WisconsinFishes in the MidwestSession B7:Fish Passage andImplications andConnectivity: M. DiebelHabitat Restoration:Considerations ofA. StruckBehavioral DeterrentSystems I: B. IckesA. Struck; OzaukeeFish Passage Program B. Ickes; The situationalMaking ConnectionsK. Moody; Ecologicalcontext for fish passageAcross Our Watersheds:Structures for theissues in the UpperActive restoration ofWaller Creek TunnelMississippi Riverriparian migratoryProjectSystemcorridors in the LakeMichigan Basin inOzaukee CountyR. Schneider; ReG. Sass; The effects ofplumbing roadside ditchC. Nenn; Advancingvisual and acousticnetworks to reduceFish Passage in thedeterrents to prevent theflooding, dry-outs andMenomonee Riverupstream movement ofwater pollution forWatershedAsian carpshealthier streamsS. Railsback; ComplexD. Fowler; ThinkingR. Koth; Lock and Dameffects of partialOutside the Box#1, Asian carp barrierbarriers on a simulatedCulvert, Floodplainalternatives analysis;watershed troutManagement and Urbanthe known unknownspopulationStream RehabilitationC. Chizinski (P.Sorensen); DifferencesE. Oborny (T. Osting);B. Wentzel; Habitatin the spring timeStream and vegetativeEnhancement inupstream migrations ofhabitat restoration in aConjunction with Fishinvasive common carpspring-fed stream toPassage in Southeastern(Cyprinus carpio) andaugment endangeredWisconsinnative northern pikespecies habitat(Esox luciD. Zielinski;R. Voicu; Presentation aEngineering a bubbletechnical solution thatD. Marshall; Oxbowscurtain deterrent system can achieve longitudinaland Sloughs:to deter the movementconnectivity (upstreamWisconsin’s Forgottenof common carpdownstream) of theLakesthrough shallow streamsCrişul Repede RiverLunch

Wednesday – June 11th (Afternoon Session)TimeTrack A(Capital Ballroom A)Session A8: Movementsof Native and InvasiveFishes in the MidwestImplications andConsiderations ofBehavioral DeterrentSystems II: D. ZelinskiTrack B(Capital Ballroom B)Track C(Conference Room I)Session B8: BarrierRemoval: J. RathbunSession C8: Climate &Temperature Impactson Fish Passage: N.Gillespie1:30J. Gross; Effects of asweeping low frequencypulsed DC electricalfield on Asian carpbehavior in a zero flowenvironmentA. Singler; MappingDam Removal Success:Lessons from UnitedStates Dam Removals1:50M. Gaikowksi;Response of fishes tothe operation of watergunsL. Wildman; TheBiggest Barriers toBarrier Removal2:10A. Murphy; Impairedwaterbody restorationutilizing electric fishbarrier technology toexclude invasive carpT. MacDonald;Restoring MinnesotaFalls after a Century ofSubmergence2:30C. Dennis III; Use ofcarbon dioxide as anon-physical barrier todeter fish movementL. HollingsworthSegedy; Opportunisticvs Strategy: Raising thebar for stream barrierremovals in western PATrack D(Conference Room II)M. Lang (D. Crowder);A Sensitivity Analysisof How RegionalClimate Differences andFish Passage CriteriaAffect SteelheadMigration OpportunityJ. Lyons; Conservingriverine lake sturgeon inWisconsin under awarming climate: theimportance ofconnectivityM. Weinhold; Using aClimate ChangeVulnerabilityAssessment to PrioritizeAquatic OrganismPassage ProjectsC. Caudill; IndirectEffects of Impoundmenton Migrating Fish:Temperature Gradientsin Fish Ladders SlowDam Passage by AdultChinook Salmon2:50Conference Sessions End3:15 to5:15Goal-Setting Workshop: Establishing Regional Goals for Connectivity Restoration Based onMigratory Fish Populations* (Conference Room II)Thursday – June 12th8:00Tour Departs for the Milwaukee River Watershed and Lake Michigan Basin *5:30Tour Returns to Madison / End of All FP2014 Related Activities* MUST REGISTER SEPARATELY FOR EVENT, ADDITIONAL FEE MAY APPLY

River, Rhode Island 11:40 A. Beyer; The view from the field – what are the greatest policy needs and opportunities to get more of this work done M. Yaw (M. Yaw & S. Aston); Design and Physical Model Testing of a Bottomless Baffled Culvert N. Burnett; Burst swimming in areas of tur

Related Documents:

Web Hosting at UMass Amherst UMass Amherst Information Technology .

End of the Year Celebrations June 3rd: 8th Grade Breakfast (OLA Gym; 8:30 AM); Grades 1-4 Field Trip to the Bronx Zoo June 4th: 8th Grade Dinner-Dance (7 PM) June 5th: Altar Server/SCOLA Trip June 6th: 8th Grade Trip to Philadelphia June 7th: 8th Grade Honors (Morning Announcements, 8:05 AM); Graduation Mass (OLA Church 8:30 AM) June 8th: 8th Grade Graduation (OLA Church, 1 PM)

Alumnus Magazine Photograph Colleciton UMass (1947- ) UMass administration UMass alumni UMass history UMass staff UMass students Collection overview The once active photo morgue of the Alumnus Magazine, the Alumnus Magazine Photograph Collection cap

UMass Lowell Andy Mangels, Vice Chancellor for A&F UMass Amherst Mike Barone, Interim Vice Chancellor for Administration & Fiscal Services UMass Dartmouth Kathleen Kirleis, Vice Chancellor for A&F UMass Boston John Letchford, CIO University of Massachusetts President's Office Advisory Working Group Stephen Karam, UMass Board of .

UMass Engineering Find jobs, internships/co-ops and connect to the UMass Engineering Career Center for recruiting events, career fairs, workshops, helpful resources, and appointments! 1.o to G UMass.JoinHandshake.com 2. Click and login using your UMass Net ID and Password 3. Complete your profile.

University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst, MA 01003 413-545-2222 director Dr. Wesley Autio 205 Paige Lab autio@umass.edu 413-545-2963 Administrative Assistant Registrar Carol Redmond Elizabeth Wiernasz 208 Paige Lab 211 Paige Lab 413-545-2222 413-545-3305 cbredmond@umass.edu wiernasz@cns.umass.edu Assistant to the Director Barbara Miller 201 .

Worship Schedule Sunday June 6th 10:30 am Pastor Tom Skrenes Sunday June 13th 10:30 am Lisa Bouche, LLM Sunday June 20th 10:30 am Lisa Bouche, LLM Sunday June 27th 10:30 am Pastor Dave VanKley Sunday July 4th 10:30 am TBA Sunday July 11th 10:30 am TBA Sunday July 18th 10:30 am TBA Sunday July 25th 10:30 am TBA Worship is open to those who feel safe attending.

from the Henry P. Kendall Foundation of Boston, Massachusetts we launched the Local Healthy UMass Food System Initiative that is the basis for this Guide. Mission of the Local Healthy UMass Food System Initiative Implement healthy, sustainable, and delicious menu items at UMass Amherst in a cost-effective manner.