Streamline your flow

Tim Jardine Canadian Rivers Institute

Tim Jardine Canadian Rivers Institute
Tim Jardine Canadian Rivers Institute

Tim Jardine Canadian Rivers Institute Dr. jardine has 15 years’ experience studying aquatic food webs in eastern canada, northern australia and western canada. he leads a large interdisciplinary team studying long term environmental change in the saskatchewan river delta, a massive river wetland in central canada. We have an active lab of undergraduate and graduate students and post doctoral fellows that studies contaminant bioaccumulation, the environmental effects of large dams on downstream wetlands, and the basic ecology of rivers and their floodplains.

Canadian Rivers Institute
Canadian Rivers Institute

Canadian Rivers Institute I am an applied aquatic ecologist who studies the biology of streams, rivers and wetlands. i use a food web approach to understand how energy and contaminants move through ecosystems from the bottom to the top of the food chain. Tim jardine, associate professor | cited by 5,466 | of university of saskatchewan, saskatoon (u of s) | read 141 publications | contact tim jardine. Tim jardine phd professor, school of environment and sustainability member, toxicology centre 306 966 4158 [email protected] website video intro address toxicology centre. An evaluation of deuterium as a food source tracer in temperate streams of eastern canada timothy d. jardine1 and karen a. kidd2 canadian rivers institute and department of biology, university of new brunswick, saint john, new brunswick, canada, e2l 4l5.

Canadian Rivers Institute
Canadian Rivers Institute

Canadian Rivers Institute Tim jardine phd professor, school of environment and sustainability member, toxicology centre 306 966 4158 [email protected] website video intro address toxicology centre. An evaluation of deuterium as a food source tracer in temperate streams of eastern canada timothy d. jardine1 and karen a. kidd2 canadian rivers institute and department of biology, university of new brunswick, saint john, new brunswick, canada, e2l 4l5. Dr. tim jardine co chair, toxicology graduate program; associate professor, school of environment and sustainability 306 966 4158 [email protected] website address toxicology centre room 215, 44 campus drive saskatoon, sk s7n 5b3. Affiliation 1 department of biology, canadian rivers institute, university of new brunswick, saint john, new brunswick, canada e2l 4l5. [email protected]. Adapting social cultural environmental flows for cold regions. in northern regions, many rivers remain ice covered for a period of three to six months and have two distinct low flow periods: mid winter and mid to late summer. Tim jardine associate professor school of environment and sustainability, toxicology centre university of saskatchewan.

Canadian Rivers Institute
Canadian Rivers Institute

Canadian Rivers Institute Dr. tim jardine co chair, toxicology graduate program; associate professor, school of environment and sustainability 306 966 4158 [email protected] website address toxicology centre room 215, 44 campus drive saskatoon, sk s7n 5b3. Affiliation 1 department of biology, canadian rivers institute, university of new brunswick, saint john, new brunswick, canada e2l 4l5. [email protected]. Adapting social cultural environmental flows for cold regions. in northern regions, many rivers remain ice covered for a period of three to six months and have two distinct low flow periods: mid winter and mid to late summer. Tim jardine associate professor school of environment and sustainability, toxicology centre university of saskatchewan.

Canadian Rivers Institute
Canadian Rivers Institute

Canadian Rivers Institute Adapting social cultural environmental flows for cold regions. in northern regions, many rivers remain ice covered for a period of three to six months and have two distinct low flow periods: mid winter and mid to late summer. Tim jardine associate professor school of environment and sustainability, toxicology centre university of saskatchewan.

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