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dc.contributor.authorCarpenter, Steve
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-15T16:14:10Z
dc.date.available2025-05-15T16:14:10Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.identifier.urihttp://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/95143
dc.description"Competing demands for land and water resources challenge decision processes in many urbanizing agricultural areas of the Upper Midwest, including the Yahara watershed of Dane County, Wisconsin. Rising precipitation, increasingly intense storms, and warming winters further stress land and water resources. We organized scientists, artists, storytellers, and local people to co-create alternative scenarios of future development and compared the outcomes of each scenario (https://wsc.limnology.wisc.edu/). Resilience to coming changes depends on expanding the area of natural prairie, savanna, and forest and ongoing conversation, storytelling, art, and scientific modeling of emerging futures. Presenter: Steve Carpenter, UW-Madison Center for Limnology"en_US
dc.description.abstract"Competing demands for land and water resources challenge decision processes in many urbanizing agricultural areas of the Upper Midwest, including the Yahara watershed of Dane County, Wisconsin. Rising precipitation, increasingly intense storms, and warming winters further stress land and water resources. We organized scientists, artists, storytellers, and local people to co-create alternative scenarios of future development and compared the outcomes of each scenario (https://wsc.limnology.wisc.edu/). Resilience to coming changes depends on expanding the area of natural prairie, savanna, and forest and ongoing conversation, storytelling, art, and scientific modeling of emerging futures. Presenter: Steve Carpenter, UW-Madison Center for Limnology"en_US
dc.subjectExtension Lakesen_US
dc.subjectConventionen_US
dc.titleFuture of Agriculture and Water in the Yahara Regionen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US


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