Skip to content

Commit b463a1c

Browse files
committed
Built site for gh-pages
1 parent 64b4f51 commit b463a1c

4 files changed

Lines changed: 4 additions & 3 deletions

File tree

.nojekyll

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -1 +1 @@
1-
41988aca
1+
24c99be8

research.html

Lines changed: 1 addition & 0 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -170,6 +170,7 @@ <h1 class="title">Research</h1>
170170
</div>
171171
</div>
172172
</div>
173+
<p>test</p>
173174

174175

175176

search.json

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@
3939
"href": "research.html",
4040
"title": "Research",
4141
"section": "",
42-
"text": "The Bart Ecohydrology Lab is based in the Sierra Nevada Research Institute at the University of California, Merced. Ecohydrology is the study of how hydrological and ecological systems interact. Ecohydrology is important because water availability and vegetation growth are tightly coupled, particularly in water-limited environments such as California. Changes to the ecohydrologic functioning of a watershed has implications for forest health, carbon sequestration, water resources, and fire risk.\nResearch in the lab is used to advance scientific understanding, generate decision-support tools, and to inform policy. While the lab’s research is frequently based in the Sierra Nevada and California, we have research projects throughout North America and the world. We use a mix of tools, including biophysical models, statistical models, and remote sensing.\nResearch in the lab focuses on three broad domains.\n\nEcoinformatics\nEcoinformatics is the science of using computational tools and data analysis to investigate ecological systems. We use ecoinformatics to generate novel approaches for investigating water, carbon, and nutrient fluxes.\n\nEcohydrology and Disturbance\nEcosystem disturbances come in many types, including wildfire, bark beetles, drought, and forest management. We examine how disturbances alter ecohydrologic functioning, ranging from vegetation resilience to water supply for human communities.\n\nEcohydrology and Climate Change\nClimate change affects many ecohydrologic processes, altering functioning in ways that are not always obvious and sometimes counterintuitive. We are interested in predicting the effects of climate change and understanding how management actions can be used to mitigate its worse consequences."
42+
"text": "The Bart Ecohydrology Lab is based in the Sierra Nevada Research Institute at the University of California, Merced. Ecohydrology is the study of how hydrological and ecological systems interact. Ecohydrology is important because water availability and vegetation growth are tightly coupled, particularly in water-limited environments such as California. Changes to the ecohydrologic functioning of a watershed has implications for forest health, carbon sequestration, water resources, and fire risk.\nResearch in the lab is used to advance scientific understanding, generate decision-support tools, and to inform policy. While the lab’s research is frequently based in the Sierra Nevada and California, we have research projects throughout North America and the world. We use a mix of tools, including biophysical models, statistical models, and remote sensing.\nResearch in the lab focuses on three broad domains.\n\nEcoinformatics\nEcoinformatics is the science of using computational tools and data analysis to investigate ecological systems. We use ecoinformatics to generate novel approaches for investigating water, carbon, and nutrient fluxes.\n\nEcohydrology and Disturbance\nEcosystem disturbances come in many types, including wildfire, bark beetles, drought, and forest management. We examine how disturbances alter ecohydrologic functioning, ranging from vegetation resilience to water supply for human communities.\n\nEcohydrology and Climate Change\nClimate change affects many ecohydrologic processes, altering functioning in ways that are not always obvious and sometimes counterintuitive. We are interested in predicting the effects of climate change and understanding how management actions can be used to mitigate its worse consequences.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\ntest"
4343
},
4444
{
4545
"objectID": "publications.html",

sitemap.xml

Lines changed: 1 addition & 1 deletion
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@
1010
</url>
1111
<url>
1212
<loc>https://ryanrbart.com/research.html</loc>
13-
<lastmod>2024-01-16T06:59:51.419Z</lastmod>
13+
<lastmod>2024-01-16T19:30:07.330Z</lastmod>
1414
</url>
1515
<url>
1616
<loc>https://ryanrbart.com/publications.html</loc>

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)