Apps & Ideas
Showing items 1 - 9 of 63 related items found
-
Canada-Manitoba Memorandum of Understanding Respecting Lake Winnipeg and the Lake Winnipeg Basin
Go to Paper paper -
Protocole d'entente Canada-Manitoba portant sur le lac Winnipeg et le bassin du lac Winnipeg
Go to Paper paperProtocole d'entente Canada-Manitoba portant sur le lac Winnipeg et le bassin du lac Winnipeg entre LE GOUVERNEMENT DU CANADA, represente aux presentes par le ministre de l'Environnement, qui est responsable du ministere de l'Environnement (<< le Canada») ET LE GOUVERNEMENT DU MANITOBA, represente aux presentes par le ministre de la Gestion des ressources hydriques, (<< le Manitoba ») Le Canada et le Manitoba sont collectivement appeles « les parties ».
-
Comparison of hydrologic dynamics in forested and agricultural sub-watersheds of a large mixed-use Prairie watershed
Go to Visualization vizThe natural history of the Prairies includes the large-scale human modification of landscape biology and hydrology from first settlement to present. Forested land has been and continues to be lost and runoff is increasingly artificially drained in this intensively managed region. The impact of such modifications on hydrological dynamics has yet to be understood in such a way that measurable landscape alterations (i.e., area of forest lost, hydraulic capacity of artificial surface drains) can be linked to quantifiable alterations in event storm hydrographs or hydrological regimes. Here we focused on a large mixed-used watershed to compare the temporal hydrological dynamics of forested sub-watersheds to those of neighbouring, deforested agricultural sub-watersheds within a similar geologic and pedologic setting. The Catfish Creek Watershed (CCW) drains a 600 km2 area located approximately 90 km north-east of Winnipeg (Manitoba, Canada; see Fig. 1a) and has been extensively impacted by human activities including the continued clearing of forested land for cultivation. It is characterized as a low-relief, agro-forested watershed (~45% forest, ~40% crops, ~10% swamp, ~5% other, see Fig. 1b). Surface runoff is managed in part by a network of artificial drains in both the forested and cultivated portions of this watershed. The lower CCW is naturally-vegetated by parkland forest and swamp. The eastern edge of the upper watershed is also forested and of greater relative relief, while to the west the landscape is dominated by intensive, large-scale agricultural operations on a near-level landscape.
-
Survey of Pathogens and Parasites in Fish from Devils Lake and Lake Ashtabula in North Dakota, and Lake Traverse, South Dakota. 2008 Survey Results
Go to Paper paperTechnical Report 11-01 January 2011
-
Initial Risk Assessment Report for Fish Parasites from Devils Lake
Go to Paper paperOverview and Discussion of Parasite Survey Results 2006 - 2008
-
Interactive Map of City of Winnipeg River and Stream Water Quality Data
Go to Api api -
Website - City of Winnipeg Rivers and Streams Data
Go to Visualization viz -
Geobase Geospatial data website (for DEM data)
Go to Api api -
Federal Standards and Procedures for the National Watershed Boundary Dataset (WBD) (4 ed.)
Go to Paper paper