Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Chesapeake Conservancy Active and Abandon Mine Area (km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Road Stream Crossings in Watershed (crossings/km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Streambed fine sediment cover (kg-finsed m-1 yr-1)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Percent Impervious in Riparian Zone in Catchment
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Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Natures Network terrestrial, aquatic and imperiled species cores overlap (km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Natures Network terrestrial and imperiled species cores overlap (km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
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Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Natures Network terrestrial and aquatic cores overlap (km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Natures Network aquatic and imperiled species cores overlap (km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Natures Network core habitat and imperiled species (km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Natures Network terrestrial core to core connectors (km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total phosphorus load from point-source wastewater treatment facilities (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total phosphorus load from fertilizer applications (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total phosphorus load from manure applications (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total phosphorus load from urban non-point sources (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total nitrogen load from wastewater treatment facility point sources (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total nitrogen load from fertilizer applications (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total nitrogen load from septic system effluent (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total nitrogen load from manure applications (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental total nitrogen load from other urban non-point sources (kg/yr)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental suspended-sediment load (megagrams per year)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental suspended-sediment load from streambank erosion (megagrams per year)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental suspended-sediment load from non-agricultural and non-urban uplands (megagrams per year)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental suspended-sediment load from urban uplands with fine sediment (megagrams per year)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental suspended-sediment load from urban uplands with medium or coarse sediment (megagrams per year)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental suspended-sediment load from urban uplands with residuum (megagrams per year)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental suspended-sediment load from urban uplands with residuum (megagrams per year)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Incremental suspended-sediment load from agricultural uplands with medium or coarse sediment or residuum (megagrams per year)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Recent change in forest 2013-2017 in catchment (%)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Recent change in impervious cover 2013-2017 in catchment (%)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Projected change in impervious cover 2017-2035 in catchment (%)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Change in housing unit density 1990-2010 (units/km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Agricultural Water Use in Catchment (gallons)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Change in probability of brook trout occurance, current conditions vs 6 degC
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Mean summer temperature (degC) w/ air temp +2 degC
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Mean summer temperature (degC) w/ air temp +4 degC
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Mean summer temperature (degC) w/ air temp +6 degC
Display Field: GRIDCODE
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Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: TNC slightly less resilient in catchment (km2)
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Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: TNC average/medium resilient in catchment (km2)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Name: Index of estimated magnitude of climate stress exerted on habitats in 2080
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Development of the Maryland Healthy Watersheds Assessment (MDHWA) establishes a framework of watershed health and vulnerability metrics for assessing Maryland waters and watersheds. Development of this statewide assessment was built upon the previously completed Chesapeake Bay Healthy Watersheds Assessment (CHWA, Roth et al. 2020), making use of more recent and refined regional data, and also integrating state-specific data where possible. The assessment is intended to inform watershed management decision-making to sustain the health of state-identified healthy watersheds, which have been defined in Maryland as the watersheds associated with its designated high-quality, Tier II waters. The proposed MDHWA and its suite of health and vulnerability metrics provide information related to specific threats facing Maryland. The MDHWA will increase State capacity to better understand the broad spectrum of health and vulnerability issues affecting Maryland’s streams and healthy watersheds. Data are intended to be useful to the State’s Tier II waters program, especially for assessing vulnerabilities of healthy watersheds to future degradation and helping to target and inform management efforts in these areas. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The MDHWA will serve as a model that can be replicated in other jurisdictions and updated in future assessments. Some of the data sets used to build the MDHWA are regional or national in scope and therefore readily available for use in other jurisdictions. Some data sources used in analyses are Maryland-specific, such as data from the Maryland Biological Stream Survey (MBSS), but will serve as examples of the types of data that may be available or could be pursued in other jurisdictions. While the MDHWA will be customized to Maryland’s specific issues, concerns, and data sources, the approach and framework developed for Maryland is intended to be customizable for other locations. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: f5f486dcaacc45e0a4f6fb7df9629862
Copyright Text: Nancy Roth, Brian Pickard, Ph.D.
Mark Southerland, Ph.D.
Paige Hobaugh