Ross J. Guida
Southern Illinois University Carbondale
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Featured researches published by Ross J. Guida.
The Professional Geographer | 2014
Ross J. Guida; Scott R. Abella; William J. Smith; Haroon Stephen; Christopher L. Roberts
A major theme in physical geography and biogeography is understanding how vegetation changes across geographic gradients during climate change. We assess shifts in distributions of fifteen Mojave Desert plant species based on a 2008 resurvey of 103 vegetation transects that were established in 1979. We model changes in species distributions using Maximum Entropy (Maxent) with environmental and climate variables to predict probability of species’ occurrences. Climate during the ten-year period preceding the 2008 vegetation survey was 1.5°C warmer and 3 cm per year of precipitation drier than the ten years preceding 1979. Species inhabiting the highest elevations and strongly correlated with precipitation displayed areal reductions from 1979 through 2008.
Science of The Total Environment | 2016
Ross J. Guida; Jonathan W.F. Remo; Silvia Secchi
During the latter half of the 19th Century and first half of the 20th Century, the Illinois River was heavily altered through leveeing off large portions of its floodplain, draining wetlands, and the construction of dams and river-training structures that facilitated navigation. As a result of these alterations, flood stages continue to rise, increasing flood risk and threatening to overtop levees along the La Grange Segment (LGS) of the Illinois River. Over the last two decades, more emphasis has been placed on reconnecting portions of floodplains to rivers in order to solve the long-term problem of rising flood heights attributed to continual heightening of levees to provide flood protection. Multiple studies have suggested that strategically reconnecting larger portions of the LGS could result in more sustainable floodplain management. However, the true costs and benefits of reconnecting the floodplain are not known. We use a novel hydrodynamic, geospatial, economic, and habitat suitability framework to assess the tradeoffs of strategically reconnecting the Illinois River to its floodplain in order to decrease flood risk, improve floodplain habitats, and limit the costs of reconnection. Costs include building-associated losses, lost agricultural profits, and levee removal and construction costs. Tested scenarios demonstrate that while flood heights and environmental benefits are maximized through the most aggressive levee setbacks and removals, these scenarios also have the highest costs. However, the tradeoff of implementing lower-cost scenarios is that there is less flood-height reduction and less floodplain habitat available. Several individual levee districts have high potential for reconnection based on limiting potential damages as well as providing floodplain habitat. To implement large-scale strategic floodplain reconnection, costs range from
Journal of Hydrology | 2015
Ross J. Guida; Taylor L. Swanson; Jonathan W.F. Remo; Tímea Kiss
1.2-
River Research and Applications | 2017
Jonathan W.F. Remo; Ross J. Guida; Silvia Secchi
4.3 billion. As such, payments for ecosystem services will likely be necessary to compensate landowners for decreased long-term agricultural production and building losses that result in flood-reduction benefits and increased floodplain habitat.
Applied Geography | 2016
Ross J. Guida; Jonathan W.F. Remo; Silvia Secchi
Geomorphology | 2018
Jonathan W.F. Remo; Brian S. Ickes; Julia Ryherd; Ross J. Guida; Matthew D. Therrell
50th Annual GSA North-Central Section Meeting | 2016
Jonathan W.F. Remo; Julia Ross; Ross J. Guida
2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015
Ross J. Guida
Archive | 2010
Scott R. Abella; Ross J. Guida; Stanley D. Smith; Christopher L. Roberts; Haroon Stephen; William J. Smith; Zhongwei Liu; James S. Holland; Aurore Giguet
Archive | 2010
Scott R. Abella; Haroon Stephen; Ross J. Guida