11.03.2009 – Researchers at Texas Tech University are working to discover the secrets of one of the state’s most perplexing water problems: the influence of climate change on Texas surface waters.
A new three-year project, funded by $634,000 from the U.S. Geological Survey, will bring together a team of experts to learn how to model, study and predict the influence of the changes.
Officials indicated that $148,000 of the grant will go directly to the Texas Water Science Center field station at Texas Tech. The entire project is one of only 18 selected for Geological Survey funding from nearly 200 proposals this year.
“This is a first for a project of this nature to be conducted in Texas, and I’m excited about potential benefits this project may offer to conservation and management of aquatic natural resources in the state,” said Reynaldo Patino, a professor with Texas Tech’s Department of Natural Resources Management with a joint appointment at the Geological Survey.
Patino and fellow scientists, Katharine Hayhoe from the university’s geosciences department, Chris Taylor from Texas Tech’s natural resources management department, and William Asquith from the Geological Survey’s Texas Water Science Center, have identified four specific objectives. They include:
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