| The Lower Cape Fear River Program is a large-scale water quality
and environmental assessment program covering the Cape Fear River Estuary and a large
portion of the lower Cape Fear River watershed.
A collaboration of academia, government, industry, and the public, the program is located at and administered by the Center for Marine Science at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. Program objectives are to develop an understanding of the fundamental scientific processes shaping and controlling the ecology of the Cape Fear River system and provide a mechanism for information exchange and public education. Numerous physical, chemical, and biological measurements are collected at thirty-four different sites on a regular basis so biologists, chemists, physicists, and geologists will be able to understand freshwater, estuarine, and nearshore marine processes in the Cape Fear River basin. This research will complement and refine the current basinwide management plans being developed by the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources. Currently,
a program in the middle Cape Fear River basin is performing similar monitoring activities
and a program in the upper Cape Fear River basin is in the planning stages. With the
commencement of monitoring in all three basins, regulators will have comprehensive
scientific based information with which to form educated decisions regarding activities in
the Cape Fear River basin. Why
is the Cape Fear River Important? |
Monitoring & Research Station Map Station Descriptions Monitoring Parameters Fin
Fish Monitoring Environmental Recently Updated May 2007 Presentation: Water quality within the Lower Cape Fear River Subbasins. PowerPoint Presentation Current Events Advisory Board Technical Committee Modeling Subcommittee Cape Fear River Assembly River Run Data Visualization Website Technical
Committee Related
Web Sites |
Web Design: Matthew McIver
email mciverm@uncw.edu