Water Resources Ecohydrology Lab
The Water Resources Ecohydrology Lab (WRElab) seeks to help better manage watersheds for the good of both people and nature in a shifting climate. To do so, we build new understanding of how watersheds function as systems, with interactions among meteorological forcing, geologic setting, and ecological process, and how these systems affect critical water resources.
People
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P. James Dennedy-Frank leads the Water Resources Ecohydrology Lab (WRElab). James is an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Marine & Environmental Sciences and Civil & Environmental Engineering. James completed his Ph.D. at Stanford University and worked as a postdoctoral scholar at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. James also has a B.S. and M.S. in planetary science and industry experience at Flexible Liner […]