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SFEI - HOME
The Regional Monitoring Program (RMP) is SFEI’s largest program and monitors contamination in the Estuary. It provides water quality regulators with information they need to manage the Estuary effectively. The RMP is an innovative collaborative effort between SFEI, the Regional Water Quality Control Board, and the regulated discharger community. SEDIMENT FOR SURVIVAL The tidal marshes and tidal flats along the San Francisco Bay shoreline depend on sediment delivered by the tides. Healthy sediment supplies are essential for maintaining resilient marshes and tidal flats that can persist into the future and build up as sea levelcontinues to rise.
SAN FRANCISCO BAY SHORELINE ADAPTATION ATLAS: WORKING WITH Operational Landscape Units (OLUs) are a practical way to manage the physical and jurisdictional complexity of the Bay shoreline. Home to beaches, wetlands, marinas, ports, landfills, lifeline infrastructure, residential neighborhoods and more, San Francisco Bay’s 650-kilometer (400-mile) shoreline is diverse, which means there is no one-size-fits-all solution to rising sea levels. BAYLANDS ECOSYSTEM HABITAT GOALS PROJECT SFEI's Letitia Grenier served as lead scientist of the Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals Project, which has yielded a report called The Baylands and Climate Change: What We Can Do. The report is an update to the 1999 Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals, which for the first time set comprehensive restoration goals for the San Francisco Bay estuary.. Produced by a collaborative of 21 management PREPARING FOR THE STORM Preparing for the Storm is an exciting partnership between Zone 7 Water Agency, the San Francisco Estuary Institute, H.T. Harvey & Associates, and the San Francisco Bay Joint Venture, with valuable contributions from the City of Dublin, City of Pleasanton, City of Livermore, and Castlewood Country Club.ERICA SPOTSWOOD
Terrestrial Ecology. Urban Nature Lab. 510-746-7331. ericas@sfei.org. Erica Spotswood is Lead Scientist for the Urban Nature Lab at the San Francisco Estuary Institute. She uses data-driven approaches to quantify the benefits of nature for biodiversity and human well-being, and brings science into design and planning for nature in cities. HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS ANALYSIS TOOL Search for Water Body . By Water Body Name. By Water Board Region. Latest Incidents. Download Satellite Data. Help & Instructions .Purpose
LETITIA GRENIER
Letitia Grenier co-directs SFEI's Resilient Landscapes Program. She is the science lead for the 2015 State of the Estuary Report (a SF Estuary Partnership project) and the 2015 update to the Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals (a California Coastal Conservancy project), heading a team of over 200 environmental scientists, managers, and regulators to develop science based recommendations for CALIFORNIA TRASH MONITORING METHODS AND ASSESSMENTS California Trash Monitoring Methods Project (Project) The California Ocean Protection Council (OPC), in close partnership with the State Water Board, has recognized the importance of standard methods for trash monitoring and has funded this project.SEDIMATCH
SediMatch is a planning tool to assist partners in identifying potential matches for the beneficial reuse of sediment. By adding your project, this does not obligate you to provide or accept sediment, or pay for the transport costs. SediMatch is a collaborative program between wetland habitat restoration, flood control, and dredging communities to discuss mutually beneficial strategies forSFEI - HOME
The Regional Monitoring Program (RMP) is SFEI’s largest program and monitors contamination in the Estuary. It provides water quality regulators with information they need to manage the Estuary effectively. The RMP is an innovative collaborative effort between SFEI, the Regional Water Quality Control Board, and the regulated discharger community. SEDIMENT FOR SURVIVAL The tidal marshes and tidal flats along the San Francisco Bay shoreline depend on sediment delivered by the tides. Healthy sediment supplies are essential for maintaining resilient marshes and tidal flats that can persist into the future and build up as sea levelcontinues to rise.
SAN FRANCISCO BAY SHORELINE ADAPTATION ATLAS: WORKING WITH Operational Landscape Units (OLUs) are a practical way to manage the physical and jurisdictional complexity of the Bay shoreline. Home to beaches, wetlands, marinas, ports, landfills, lifeline infrastructure, residential neighborhoods and more, San Francisco Bay’s 650-kilometer (400-mile) shoreline is diverse, which means there is no one-size-fits-all solution to rising sea levels. BAYLANDS ECOSYSTEM HABITAT GOALS PROJECT SFEI's Letitia Grenier served as lead scientist of the Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals Project, which has yielded a report called The Baylands and Climate Change: What We Can Do. The report is an update to the 1999 Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals, which for the first time set comprehensive restoration goals for the San Francisco Bay estuary.. Produced by a collaborative of 21 management PREPARING FOR THE STORM Preparing for the Storm is an exciting partnership between Zone 7 Water Agency, the San Francisco Estuary Institute, H.T. Harvey & Associates, and the San Francisco Bay Joint Venture, with valuable contributions from the City of Dublin, City of Pleasanton, City of Livermore, and Castlewood Country Club.ERICA SPOTSWOOD
Terrestrial Ecology. Urban Nature Lab. 510-746-7331. ericas@sfei.org. Erica Spotswood is Lead Scientist for the Urban Nature Lab at the San Francisco Estuary Institute. She uses data-driven approaches to quantify the benefits of nature for biodiversity and human well-being, and brings science into design and planning for nature in cities. HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS ANALYSIS TOOL Search for Water Body . By Water Body Name. By Water Board Region. Latest Incidents. Download Satellite Data. Help & Instructions .Purpose
LETITIA GRENIER
Letitia Grenier co-directs SFEI's Resilient Landscapes Program. She is the science lead for the 2015 State of the Estuary Report (a SF Estuary Partnership project) and the 2015 update to the Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals (a California Coastal Conservancy project), heading a team of over 200 environmental scientists, managers, and regulators to develop science based recommendations for CALIFORNIA TRASH MONITORING METHODS AND ASSESSMENTS California Trash Monitoring Methods Project (Project) The California Ocean Protection Council (OPC), in close partnership with the State Water Board, has recognized the importance of standard methods for trash monitoring and has funded this project.SEDIMATCH
SediMatch is a planning tool to assist partners in identifying potential matches for the beneficial reuse of sediment. By adding your project, this does not obligate you to provide or accept sediment, or pay for the transport costs. SediMatch is a collaborative program between wetland habitat restoration, flood control, and dredging communities to discuss mutually beneficial strategies for NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT STRATEGY For the most up to date information, visit the Nutrient Strategy project website.. The San Francisco Bay Nutrient Management Strategy is a regional initiative for developing the science needed for informed decisions about managing nutrient loads and maintaining beneficial uses within the Bay in response to the apparent changes in the Bay’s resilience to nutrient loading. THE PULSE OF THE BAY The Regional Monitoring Program for Water Quality in San Francisco Bay is an innovative collaboration of the San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board, the regulated discharger community, and the San Francisco Estuary Institute. It provides water quality regulators with information they need to manage the Bay effectively. The Program issues a report each year, the Pulse of the Bay PREPARING FOR THE STORM Preparing for the Storm is an exciting partnership between Zone 7 Water Agency, the San Francisco Estuary Institute, H.T. Harvey & Associates, and the San Francisco Bay Joint Venture, with valuable contributions from the City of Dublin, City of Pleasanton, City of Livermore, and Castlewood Country Club. NEW LIFE FOR ERODING SHORELINES The New Life for Eroding Shorelines project explores living shoreline approaches for sea level rise adaptation that can reduce erosion at the marsh edge and improve habitat quality for marsh species.Solutions explored include reestablishing marsh-fringing barrier beaches to attenuate waves at the marsh edge and reintroducing California Sea Blite (Suaeda californica), a rare and endangered PERFLUOROALKYL AND POLYFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES (PFAS) Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a broad class of fluorine-rich specialty chemicals. More than 4,700 PFAS are used in consumer, commercial and industrial applications, including food packaging materials, waterproof textiles, stain-resistant carpets and furniture, fire-suppression foams, processing aids for the production of fluoropolymers like Teflon, mistLETITIA GRENIER
Letitia Grenier co-directs SFEI's Resilient Landscapes Program. She is the science lead for the 2015 State of the Estuary Report (a SF Estuary Partnership project) and the 2015 update to the Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals (a California Coastal Conservancy project), heading a team of over 200 environmental scientists, managers, and regulators to develop science based recommendations for DELTA LANDSCAPES SCENARIO PLANNING TOOL The User Guide provides detailed instructions on using the tool. It discusses how the tool operates, how to design a scenario, how to import other scenarios, what data inputs are needed, where to acquire these data, and how to interpret and evaluate scenario outputs.ROBIN M. GROSSINGER
Urban Nature Lab. 510-746-7380. robin@sfei.org. Robin Grossinger is a Senior Scientist at the San Francisco Estuary Institute, where he co-directs, with Letitia Grenier, SFEI’s Resilient Landscapes program. For over twenty years, Robin has analyzed how California landscapes have changed since European contact, using these data toguide
MITCH AVALON
Mitch Avalon is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley where he received his Bachelor of Science Degree in Civil Engineering. He joined Contra Costa County Public Works Department in 1979. Mr. Avalon has worked in many areas of Public Works, including transportation engineering, development engineering, design, andconstruction.
DELTA REGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAM Delta RMP Calendar. This site is designed to support the activities of the Delta RMP generally with specific features for the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC). Within this site, you will find meeting notes, tracking sheets for deliverables and action items, calendar of events, and archives of emails sent to Delta RMP email lists. HOME | SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY INSTITUTEABOUTPROGRAMS & PROJECTSLIBRARYDATA CENTERSUPPORT SFEICLEAN WATER The Regional Monitoring Program (RMP) is SFEI’s largest program and monitors contamination in the Estuary. It provides water quality regulators with information they need to manage the Estuary effectively. The RMP is an innovative collaborative effort between SFEI, the Regional Water Quality Control Board, and the regulated discharger community. SEDIMENT FOR SURVIVAL The tidal marshes and tidal flats along the San Francisco Bay shoreline depend on sediment delivered by the tides. Healthy sediment supplies are essential for maintaining resilient marshes and tidal flats that can persist into the future and build up as sea levelcontinues to rise.
SAN FRANCISCO BAY SHORELINE ADAPTATION ATLAS: WORKING WITH Operational Landscape Units (OLUs) are a practical way to manage the physical and jurisdictional complexity of the Bay shoreline. Home to beaches, wetlands, marinas, ports, landfills, lifeline infrastructure, residential neighborhoods and more, San Francisco Bay’s 650-kilometer (400-mile) shoreline is diverse, which means there is no one-size-fits-all solution to rising sea levels. NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT STRATEGY For the most up to date information, visit the Nutrient Strategy project website.. The San Francisco Bay Nutrient Management Strategy is a regional initiative for developing the science needed for informed decisions about managing nutrient loads and maintaining beneficial uses within the Bay in response to the apparent changes in the Bay’s resilience to nutrient loading. PERFLUOROALKYL AND POLYFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES (PFAS) Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a broad class of fluorine-rich specialty chemicals. More than 4,700 PFAS are used in consumer, commercial and industrial applications, including food packaging materials, waterproof textiles, stain-resistant carpets and furniture, fire-suppression foams, processing aids for the production of fluoropolymers like Teflon, mistERICA SPOTSWOOD
Terrestrial Ecology. Urban Nature Lab. 510-746-7331. ericas@sfei.org. Erica Spotswood is Lead Scientist for the Urban Nature Lab at the San Francisco Estuary Institute. She uses data-driven approaches to quantify the benefits of nature for biodiversity and human well-being, and brings science into design and planning for nature in cities. HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS ANALYSIS TOOL Search for Water Body . By Water Body Name. By Water Board Region. Latest Incidents. Download Satellite Data. Help & Instructions .Purpose
DONNA BALL | SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY INSTITUTE Donna has worked as a restoration ecologist with over 15 years of experience in tidal wetland restoration in San Francisco Bay. Donna most recently served as the Habitat Restoration Director for Save The Bay where she led a community-based restoration and education program engaged in wetland restoration.SEDIMATCH
SediMatch is a planning tool to assist partners in identifying potential matches for the beneficial reuse of sediment. By adding your project, this does not obligate you to provide or accept sediment, or pay for the transport costs. SediMatch is a collaborative program between wetland habitat restoration, flood control, and dredging communities to discuss mutually beneficial strategies for DELTA REGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAMDELTA REGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAMREGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAMDELTA MONITORINGDELTA REGIONAL AUTHORITY DRADELTA JUNCTION WATER QUALITYDELTA AUTHORITY Delta RMP Calendar. This site is designed to support the activities of the Delta RMP generally with specific features for the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC). Within this site, you will find meeting notes, tracking sheets for deliverables and action items, calendar of events, and archives of emails sent to Delta RMP email lists. HOME | SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY INSTITUTEABOUTPROGRAMS & PROJECTSLIBRARYDATA CENTERSUPPORT SFEICLEAN WATER The Regional Monitoring Program (RMP) is SFEI’s largest program and monitors contamination in the Estuary. It provides water quality regulators with information they need to manage the Estuary effectively. The RMP is an innovative collaborative effort between SFEI, the Regional Water Quality Control Board, and the regulated discharger community. SEDIMENT FOR SURVIVAL The tidal marshes and tidal flats along the San Francisco Bay shoreline depend on sediment delivered by the tides. Healthy sediment supplies are essential for maintaining resilient marshes and tidal flats that can persist into the future and build up as sea levelcontinues to rise.
SAN FRANCISCO BAY SHORELINE ADAPTATION ATLAS: WORKING WITH Operational Landscape Units (OLUs) are a practical way to manage the physical and jurisdictional complexity of the Bay shoreline. Home to beaches, wetlands, marinas, ports, landfills, lifeline infrastructure, residential neighborhoods and more, San Francisco Bay’s 650-kilometer (400-mile) shoreline is diverse, which means there is no one-size-fits-all solution to rising sea levels. NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT STRATEGY For the most up to date information, visit the Nutrient Strategy project website.. The San Francisco Bay Nutrient Management Strategy is a regional initiative for developing the science needed for informed decisions about managing nutrient loads and maintaining beneficial uses within the Bay in response to the apparent changes in the Bay’s resilience to nutrient loading. PERFLUOROALKYL AND POLYFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES (PFAS) Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a broad class of fluorine-rich specialty chemicals. More than 4,700 PFAS are used in consumer, commercial and industrial applications, including food packaging materials, waterproof textiles, stain-resistant carpets and furniture, fire-suppression foams, processing aids for the production of fluoropolymers like Teflon, mistERICA SPOTSWOOD
Terrestrial Ecology. Urban Nature Lab. 510-746-7331. ericas@sfei.org. Erica Spotswood is Lead Scientist for the Urban Nature Lab at the San Francisco Estuary Institute. She uses data-driven approaches to quantify the benefits of nature for biodiversity and human well-being, and brings science into design and planning for nature in cities. HARMFUL ALGAL BLOOMS ANALYSIS TOOL Search for Water Body . By Water Body Name. By Water Board Region. Latest Incidents. Download Satellite Data. Help & Instructions .Purpose
DONNA BALL | SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY INSTITUTE Donna has worked as a restoration ecologist with over 15 years of experience in tidal wetland restoration in San Francisco Bay. Donna most recently served as the Habitat Restoration Director for Save The Bay where she led a community-based restoration and education program engaged in wetland restoration.SEDIMATCH
SediMatch is a planning tool to assist partners in identifying potential matches for the beneficial reuse of sediment. By adding your project, this does not obligate you to provide or accept sediment, or pay for the transport costs. SediMatch is a collaborative program between wetland habitat restoration, flood control, and dredging communities to discuss mutually beneficial strategies for DELTA REGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAMDELTA REGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAMREGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAMDELTA MONITORINGDELTA REGIONAL AUTHORITY DRADELTA JUNCTION WATER QUALITYDELTA AUTHORITY Delta RMP Calendar. This site is designed to support the activities of the Delta RMP generally with specific features for the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC). Within this site, you will find meeting notes, tracking sheets for deliverables and action items, calendar of events, and archives of emails sent to Delta RMP email lists.PROGRAMS & PROJECTS
Our Clean Water Program is one of the nation's premier water quality science programs supporting aquatic resource protection. Clean Water anticipates and meets the water quality information needs of managers and the public. The Regional Monitoring Program for Water Quality in San Francisco Bay is the flagship of the Clean Water Program.DATA CENTER
Data Center. SFEI is the regional data center for the San Francisco Bay-Delta and northern montane regions. The Institute manages water quality, tissue, wetlands, historical, and spatial data, and develops tools for uploading, accessing, and visualizing data. The tools below integrate and display data in meaningful ways to inform different DELTA REGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAM The Delta Regional Monitoring Program (Delta RMP) is a stakeholder-directed project formed to develop water quality data necessary for improving our understanding of Delta water quality issues. Our goal is to better coordinate and design current and future monitoring activities in and around the Delta to create a cost-effective approach for BAYLANDS ECOSYSTEM HABITAT GOALS PROJECT SFEI's Letitia Grenier served as lead scientist of the Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals Project, which has yielded a report called The Baylands and Climate Change: What We Can Do. The report is an update to the 1999 Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals, which for the first time set comprehensive restoration goals for the San Francisco Bay estuary.. Produced by a collaborative of 21 management REGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAM FOR WATER QUALITY IN SAN The Regional Monitoring Program for Water Quality in San Francisco Bay (RMP) is SFEI’s largest program. It provides the information that regulators and decision-makers need to manage the Bay effectively. The RMP is an innovative collaborative effort between SFEI, the Regional Water Quality Control Board, and the regulated discharger community. BAY REGIONAL MONITORING PROGRAM The Pulse of the Bay. Download the Pulse of the Bay!This report from the Regional Monitoring Program for Water Quality in San Francisco Bay features articles on the four major pathways by which pollutants enter the Bay: municipal wastewater, industrial wastewater, stormwater, and dredging and dredged sediment disposal. Each article provides a basic introduction to the pathway and discusses the PREPARING FOR THE STORM Preparing for the Storm is an exciting partnership between Zone 7 Water Agency, the San Francisco Estuary Institute, H.T. Harvey & Associates, and the San Francisco Bay Joint Venture, with valuable contributions from the City of Dublin, City of Pleasanton, City of Livermore, and Castlewood Country Club. DELTA LANDSCAPES SCENARIO PLANNING TOOL The User Guide provides detailed instructions on using the tool. It discusses how the tool operates, how to design a scenario, how to import other scenarios, what data inputs are needed, where to acquire these data, and how to interpret and evaluate scenario outputs. DONNA BALL | SAN FRANCISCO ESTUARY INSTITUTE Donna has worked as a restoration ecologist with over 15 years of experience in tidal wetland restoration in San Francisco Bay. Donna most recently served as the Habitat Restoration Director for Save The Bay where she led a community-based restoration and education program engaged in wetland restoration.LETITIA GRENIER
Letitia Grenier co-directs SFEI's Resilient Landscapes Program. She is the science lead for the 2015 State of the Estuary Report (a SF Estuary Partnership project) and the 2015 update to the Baylands Ecosystem Habitat Goals (a California Coastal Conservancy project), heading a team of over 200 environmental scientists, managers, and regulators to develop science based recommendations for__
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SF ESTUARY WETLANDS REGIONAL PROGRAM PLAN RELEASED! The Wetland Regional Monitoring Program (WRMP) Plan has been released! The WRMP will improve wetland restoration project success by putting in place regional-scale monitoring increasing the impact, utility and application of permit-driven monitoring...*
PURSUING INNOVATION
We supply science and technology for watershed and aquatic resourcemanagement
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SCIENCE FOR SOLUTIONS Our 50-plus scientists conduct research in three programs: Clean Water, Resilient Landscapes and Environmental Informatics*
OUR WATERSHEDS, OUR FUTURE We help decision-makers identify cost-effective options for protecting and restoring natural resources*
PROMOTING HEALTHY AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS We produce independent aquatic ecosystem science for the public anddecision-makers
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COLLABORATION COMES NATURALLY We work across boundaries and partner with leading organizations to drive smart environmental outcomes*
STUDYING THE PAST TO SHAPE THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF CALIFORNIA'SWATERSHEDS
Our pioneering work in historical ecology promotes a more resilient, ecologically sustainable landscape*
WATER, LAND, PEOPLE
SFEI connects people and policymakers to the waters and lands we allshare
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OUR PROGRAMS
Click to read more
Bay Regional Monitoring Program The Regional Monitoring Program (RMP) is SFEI’s largest program and monitors contamination in the Estuary. It provides water quality regulators with information they need to manage the Estuary effectively. The RMP is an innovative collaborative effort between SFEI, the Regional Water Quality Control Board, and the regulated discharger community. Read More... New Nutrient Science Initiatives SFEI is the science lead for the San Francisco Bay Nutrient Science and Management Strategy, which is developing the science needed for informed decisions about managing nutrient loads and maintaining beneficial uses within the Bay. Two recent products highlight key initiatives of this Program. Read More... Emerging Contaminants: A Success Story The SF Chronicle features a story describing how scientists have found evidence of widespread and rapid declines in flame retardant pollution in many San Francisco Bay species, according to a new study released by the San Francisco Estuary Institute. Read More...Click to read more
EcoAtlas
California's EcoAtlas provides access to information for effective wetland management. The maps and tools can be used to create a complete picture of aquatic resources in the landscape by integrating stream and wetland maps, restoration information, and monitoring results with land use, transportation, and other information important to the state’s wetlands. Read More... RipZet: A Tool for Estimating Riparian Zones The Riparian Zone Estimator Tool (RipZET) is a GIS-based decision-support tool under development for estimating riparian zones at the watershed and/or project scale. The tool provides reach-scale functional riparian width estimates based on average height of mature riparian vegetation, the steepness of hillslopes adjacent to the channel, and the floodplain inundation extent for large storm events. The appropriate width estimate for a reach is then determined based on the riparian functions associated with different channel types, which range from steep headwater channels to low-gradient, meandering channels with broad floodplains. Read More... Contaminant Data Display & Download (CD3) Contaminant Data Display and Download Tool or CD3 is an innovative visualization tool that enables users to perform spatial queries for water quality data from the San Francisco Estuary and Delta. Data can be dynamically mapped and downloaded as an Excel file. New datasets are regularly made available through this tool. Read More...Click to read more
A Delta Transformed
_A Delta Transformed: Ecological Functions, Spatial Metrics, and Landscape Change in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta_ provides the first analysis of landscape ecology metrics in the pre-disturbance and contemporary Delta to help define, design, and evaluate functional, resilient landscapes for the future. Read More... San Diego County Lagoons Historical Ecology The Northern San Diego County Lagoons Historical Ecology Investigation draws on hundreds of historical documents to analyze and reconstruct historical landscape conditions for six northern San Diego County estuaries prior to the major modifications of the late 19th and 20th centuries. This study shows that the lagoons experienced highly dynamic, variable environmental conditions and supported a diverse array of habitats and native species in the recent past. Though the lagoons have experienced widespread transformation over the past centuries, elements of the lagoon ecosystems have persisted. ReadMore...
Flood Control 2.0
Flood Control 2.0 is an ambitious regional effort aimed at helping restore stream and wetland habitats, water quality, and shoreline resilience around San Francisco Bay. The project leverages local resources from several forward-looking flood control agencies to redesign major flood control channels so that they provide both future flood conveyance and ecological benefit under a changing climate. ReadMore...
OUR TEAM
The San Francisco Estuary Institute comprises over sixty scientists, technologists, and designers who offer a wide range of expertise. Each team member, in her or his own way, helps to define environmental problems, advance public debate about them through sound science, and support consensus-based solutions that improve environmental planning, management, and policy development.All Staff
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Jeremy Lowe
Senior Environmental Scientist*
Matthew Benjamin
Environmental Analyst*
Tony Hale, PhD
Program Director
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J. Letitia Grenier, PhD Program Director, Senior Scientist*
Miguel Mendez
Environmental Analyst*
Allie King, PhD
Environmental Scientist*
Cristina Grosso
Program Manager
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Sean Baumgarten
Associate Environmental Scientist*
Gemma Shusterman
Application Development Manager*
Diana Lin, PhD
Senior Scientist
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Rebecca Sutton, PhD
Senior Scientist
*
Donna Ball
Senior Scientist
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April Robinson
Environmental Scientist*
Warner Chabot
Executive Director
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Erica Spotswood, PhDApplied Ecologist
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Micaela Bazo
Associate Environmental Scientist*
Lester McKee, PhD
Senior Environmental Scientist*
Michael Weaver
Technical Analyst
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Ezra Miller, PhD
Environmental Scientist*
Derek Roberts, PhD
Environmental Scientist*
Ellen Plane
Environmental Analyst*
Jennifer Hunt
Program Manager, Business Director*
Stephanie Panlasigui Associate Environmental Scientist*
Sam Shaw
Environmental Analyst*
Shira Bezalel
Database Administrator / Desktop Support Manager*
Sarah Lowe
Environmental Scientist , Senior Project Manager, Assistant to theChief Scientist
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Julie Beagle
Deputy Program Director, Environmental Scientist*
Patrick Walsh
Director of Finance and Contracts*
Meredith Lofthouse
Contracts Associate
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Lorenzo Flores
Web Application Developer*
Robin M. Grossinger
Program Director, Senior Scientist*
Scott Dusterhoff
Lead Geomorphologist*
Tan Zi, PhD
Environmental Scientist, Hydrologist*
Alicia Gilbreath
Environmental Scientist*
Katie McKnight
Associate Environmental Scientist*
Ariella Chelsky, PhD Environmental Scientist*
Luis Leon
Staff Accountant
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Lydia Smith Vaughn, PhD Environmental Scientist*
Melissa Foley, PhD
RMP Program Manager
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Pete Kauhanen
GIS Manager
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Matthew Heberger
Environmental Scientist*
Adam Wong
Environmental Analyst, Technology Specialist*
Sarah Pearce
Geomorphologist
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Joshua N. Collins, PhDChief Scientist
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Ruth Askevold
Program Manager
*
Nina Buzby
*
Donald Yee, PhD
Senior Environmental Scientist*
Randy Turner
Associate Environmental Scientist, Klamath Basin Monitoring ProgramCoordinator
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Kristin Art
Environmental Analyst*
David Senn, PhD
Program Director, Senior Scientist*
Anna de Lopez
*
Frank S. Leung
Accountant
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Lauren Stoneburner
Environmental Analyst*
Jamie Yin
Environmental Analyst*
Nicole David
Environmental Scientist*
Jay A. Davis, PhD
Program Director, Senior Scientist*
Sam Safran
Environmental Scientist*
Alison Whipple, PhD
Environmental Scientist*
Biruk Imagnu
Technical Support Specialist*
Erik Ndayishimiye
Associate Environmental Scientist*
Linda Russio
Administrative Services Manager*
Lawrence Sim
Geospatial Application Developer FEATURED NEWS AND EVENTS SF Estuary Wetlands Regional Program Plan Released!Apr 7, 2020
The Wetland Regional Monitoring Program (WRMP) Plan has been released! The WRMP will improve wetland restoration project success by putting in place regional-scale monitoring increasing the impact, utility and application of permit-driven monitoring to inform science-baseddecision-making.
Read More...
> Credit: SFEI
PFAS Stays in San Francisco Bay (May 7, 2020)Assessing Five
Watersheds in Santa Clara County (May 7, 2020)Bay RMP
Emerging Contaminants Workgroup Meeting (Day 1) (Apr 23, 2020) Mercury News: Earth Day after 50 Years - Still Plenty of Challenges(Apr 22, 2020)
Restoration
Vision for the Laguna de Santa Rosa Completed! (Apr 22, 2020) Care in the Time of Corona (Mar30, 2020)
SF
Bay RMP Webinar: Introduction to Predictive Toxicology (Mar 10, 2020) California Rapid Assessment Method for Wetlands (CRAM) Updates (Jan23, 2020)
Project Tracker
assists with regional reporting (Jan 22, 2020) > Photo by Shira Bezalel Featured in Forbes: Drones And Artificial Intelligence Help Combat The San Francisco Bay’s Trash Problem (Nov 21, 2019)*
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SOCIAL MEDIA
WHERE WE WORK
THE INSTITUTE'S PROJECTS PRIMARILY CENTER ON NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, BUT WE ALSO SERVE COMMUNITIES THROUGHOUT OUR STATE, AS YOU CAN SEE ON THE MAP. WE WELCOME YOU TO EXPLORE OUR PROJECTS. * Click on map symbols to browse our projects by their geography * View our PROJECT PORTFOLIO for an insight into our featured projects * Peruse a COMPREHENSIVE LIST OF PROJECTS 3311111122995521213388332222442266552222__
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