News

Junior Specialist - Job Opportunity (Closed)

We seek to fill a non-tenured, academic term appointment as a Junior Specialist. This position will aid in interdisciplinary studies of abiotic and biotic conditions that affect the ecology of invertebrate and vertebrate organisms in estuaries. Apply by February 7View the application and position requirements at https://recruit.ucdavis.edu/JPF05398.

 

Survival of a threatened salmon is linked to spatial variability in river conditions

Salmonid numbers are in decline across the western USA. Central Valley spring-run Chinook salmon's evolutionary significant unit (ESU) is extirpated from the San Joaquin River, and reintroduction efforts have resulted in poor survival of juveniles as they swim toward the ocean. Understanding the factors impacting outmigration survival is critical for population reestablishment. However, the effects of habitat variability have largely been overlooked in survival models that try to estimate where this occurs.

Assistant Specialist - Job Opportunity (Closed)

The Center for Watershed Sciences at the University of California, Davis seeks to fill an Assistant Specialist position. The research objective of this position is to improve understanding of the impact of water quality, food web dynamics and fish ecology in natural, restored and managed tidal systems in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. Specialized field, laboratory and data analysis techniques will be utilized to ensure that data are properly collected and analyzed.

Junior Specialist - Job Opportunity (Closed)

The Center for Watershed Sciences at the University of California, Davis seeks to fill a non-tenured, academic term appointment as a Junior Specialist. This position will aid in interdisciplinary studies of abiotic and biotic conditions that affect the ecology of invertebrate and vertebrate organisms in estuaries. Apply by November 15View application and position requirements at this link: https://recruit.ucdavis.edu/JPF05295.

Jay Lund recognized as AGU 2022 Fellow

Congratulations CWS Vice Director Jay Lund on being selected among the AGU 2022 Class of Fellows as a water resource system expert! Dr. Lund receives recognition for establishing a groundbreaking hydro-economic optimization framework for understanding complex water resource systems to inform decision-making.

New funding to quantify relative risk of collapse for Delta fish populations

The Center for Watershed Sciences is excited to share that a new research project to quantify the relative risk of collapse for fish populations using the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta has been funded by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. Congratulations to PIs Jonathan Walter, Danny O’Donnell, Levi Lewis, and Andrew Rypel! 

Prop 1 and more: Reconciling impounded managed wetlands and estuarine conservation goals in Suisun Marsh

UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences has received Prop 1 and other state grants to study the contribution of historic managed wetlands to ecosystem functioning in Suisun Marsh. The study will focus on plankton production and fish responses within managed ponds and adjacent sloughs under different management schemes, in an effort to 1) demonstrate the importance of historic working landscapes to marsh habitat; and 2) provide clear management guidance to optimize aquatic food production for both fishes and waterfowl. Read more about the proposed project!

Featured: Recovering America's Wildlife Act

The US is set to pass the biggest wildlife bill since the Endangered Species Act – the Recovering America's Wildlife Act (RAWA). In an excerpt, media outlet "Vox" chats with  Andrew Rypel, Co-Director of Center for Watershed Sciences, about the significance of passing RAWA and the many native species that may finally have a mechanism to get long overdue conservation work.