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United States‐Mexican border watershed assessment: Modeling nonpoint source pollution in Ambos Nogales

January 1, 2007

Ecological considerations need to be interwoven with economic policy and planning along the United States‐Mexican border. Non‐point source pollution can have significant implications for the availability of potable water and the continued health of borderland ecosystems in arid lands. However, environmental assessments in this region present a host of unique issues and problems. A common obstacle to the solution of these problems is the integration of data with different resolutions, naming conventions, and quality to create a consistent database across the binational study area. This report presents a simple modeling approach to predict nonpoint source pollution that can be used for border watersheds. The modeling approach links a hillslopescale erosion‐prediction model and a spatially derived sediment‐delivery model within a geographic information system to estimate erosion, sediment yield, and sediment deposition across the Ambos Nogales watershed in Sonora, Mexico, and Arizona. This paper discusses the procedures used for creating a watershed database to apply the models and presents an example of the modeling approach applied to a conservation‐planning problem.

Publication Year 2007
Title United States‐Mexican border watershed assessment: Modeling nonpoint source pollution in Ambos Nogales
DOI 10.1080/08865655.2007.9695670
Authors Laura M. Norman
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Borderlands Studies
Index ID 70180897
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Western Geographic Science Center