Alana Strauss Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
unknown
Research Areas
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Alana Strauss investigates watershed-scale hydrological processes, focusing on how local factors interact with broader watershed characteristics to influence sediment loss from unpaved roads. Her research also examines trends in tributary discharge to key drinking water resources, analyzing multi-year datasets to identify changes over time. Strauss has published findings on nutrient loads in Fayetteville, Arkansas, and sediment transport within the Brush Creek Watershed in Northwest Arkansas. Her work frequently involves collaboration with researchers from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville and the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, including Shannon L. Speir, Kathleen Cutting, and Karessa De la Paz.
Metrics
- Publications: 5
Selected Publications
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Watershed‐scale controls outweigh local crossing effects on sediment loss from unpaved roads (2026)
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Twenty‐Four Year Record Reveals Increasing Discharge in Tributaries to a Key Drinking Water Resource (2025)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Nutrient loads across Fayetteville, Arkansas
- Sediment Transport in the Brush Creek Watershed in Northwest Arkansas
- Nutrient loads across Fayetteville, Arkansas
- Twenty‐Four Year Record Reveals Increasing Discharge in Tributaries to a Key Drinking Water Resource
- Watershed‐scale controls outweigh local crossing effects on sediment loss from unpaved roads
- Nutrient loads across Fayetteville, Arkansas
- Sediment Transport in the Brush Creek Watershed in Northwest Arkansas
- Nutrient loads across Fayetteville, Arkansas
- Watershed‐scale controls outweigh local crossing effects on sediment loss from unpaved roads
- Nutrient loads across Fayetteville, Arkansas
- Sediment Transport in the Brush Creek Watershed in Northwest Arkansas
- Nutrient loads across Fayetteville, Arkansas
- Sediment Transport in the Brush Creek Watershed in Northwest Arkansas
- Watershed‐scale controls outweigh local crossing effects on sediment loss from unpaved roads
- Twenty‐Four Year Record Reveals Increasing Discharge in Tributaries to a Key Drinking Water Resource
- Watershed‐scale controls outweigh local crossing effects on sediment loss from unpaved roads
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