Shana Ederer
On
February 25, 2003, Dr. Laura Musacchio discussed her research in urban planning
and riparian-corridor restoration in the America’s Southwest with a crowd of
SUNY-ESF students, faculty members, and community members. She focused specifically on recent projects,
including (1) an analysis of the Salt-Gila riparian corridor in Phoenix,
Arizona, and (2) an ecological study and pilot restoration project of the Rio
Alamar Riparian corridor in the Tijuana-San Diego metropolitan area. The Phoenix metropolitan area, she explained,
has undergone rapid expansion (at a rate of 0.5 to 1.0 miles per year!) since
the 1970s. Her long-term study in Phoenix involves monitoring variables such as
habitat and water quality, flood risk, and differences between channelized and
unchannelized areas along an urban-rural gradient, as well as developing
GIS-based models. Phoenix city planners
hope Dr. Musacchio’s work will help them cope with challenges such as limited
ground water, high rates of evaporation, and the continued threat of extended
drought, as well as plan for future efforts in development and conservation.
In the rapidly-developing Tijuana
River watershed similar planning efforts are being made. However, this area differs from Phoenix in
its relative lack of infrastructure and lack of a greenway system; also,
management is complicated by the presence of temporary human settlements within
the floodplain and by industrial effluents.
Some residents favor channelization of the river, which offers enhanced
opportunities for development; others favor an approach that does not involve
structural changes. Given that the
United States and Mexico have jurisdiction over different parts of the
watershed, Dr. Musacchio noted, “Binational planning is a big challenge,” and
stressed the need for a collaborative approach.
Her research in this area involves ecological analysis of the watershed,
as well as a pilot project that will better define effective modes of
ecological restoration along the river.
Dr. Musacchio suggested that such multidisciplinary research could
enable scientists and planners to do “ecological forecasting,” noting that such
research-based “. . . alternative scenarios . . . are actually [development]
trajectories that communities can envision for themselves.”