Wednesday, May 27, 2015

IAGLR Conference Report

I am at the IAGLR meeting in Burlington, Vermont. Yesterday, Neil made a presentation about his Lake Taihu model and on Friday I will talk about my Anabaena - nitrogen interaction model. Sahar is also here, learning about cyanobacteria in the Great Lakes for her neutral evolution model. As expected, there is a lot of talk about Lake Erie at this meeting. The lake is experiencing severe cyanobacteria blooms, which led to the shutdown of Toledo’s drinking water supply last summer. As a civil engineer, I think of this as an engineered system failing (of course the lake is natural, but we have “engineered” what we put into it). This happens in our field, a prominent example is the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, which dramatically collapsed the same year it opened. Following that failure, the structural engineering community figured out what they did wrong and changed how they design bridges. The environmental engineering community needs to engage in a similar effort now. Meeting web site: http://iaglr.org/iaglr2015/

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