
The Nebraska Environmental Trust has awarded 21 grants totaling more than $1.9 million to University of Nebraska-Lincoln projects.
The grants were awarded by the NET board in June, part of a total of 118 projects receiving $20 million.
Grant amounts awarded in 2020:
- StreamNet: Building capacity to improve water quality, $307,730, Jessica Corman, School of Natural Resources.
- Direct removal of groundwater nitrate coupling water treatment and algae growth, $240,187, James Allen, biochemistry.
- Development of efficient and comprehensive recycling operation, $199,962, Prabhakar Shrestha, facilities management and operations
- Improving soil health using heat-treated manure, $105,552, Xu Li, civil Engineering.
- Nebraska farmers and farmland owners’ attitudes of targeted conservation, $104,971, Andrew Little, School of Natural Resources
- Improving statewide performance of conservation investments on Eastern redcedar invasions, $77,000, Dirac Twidwell, agronomy and horticulture.
- Improving water quality and surveying fish populations using eDNA in Nebraska, $75,000, Mark Pegg, School of Natural Resources.
- Transforming manure and cedar mulch from “waste” to “worth” – Part II, $59,813, Amy Schmidt, biological systems engineering.
- Developing a statewide community tree canopy map in Nebraska, $51,057, Yi Qi, School of Natural Resources.
- Detecting atrazine dissipation and evaluating herbicide programs without atrazine for weed control in corn and their environmental impact quotient: research and extension, $49,979, Amit Jhala, agronomy and horticulture.
- Eastern redcedar design-build microdwelling, $28,412, Jason Griffiths, architecture.
- Water use and soil-water storage effect of individual and mixed cover species and impacts on soil quality variables, $153,026, Suat Irmak, biological systems engineering.
- Beneficial impact of injected air into a subsurface drip irrigation system on plant growth and uptake of emerging antibiotics using runoff from a feedlot, $104,847, Xin Qiao, biological systems engineering.
- Low-cost biological odor treatment using an adsorption/desorption concentrator unit for reducing sulfur emission in Nebraska, $97,662, Ashraf Aly Hassan, engineering.
- Citizen Science: A valuable approach for monitoring groundwater quality in the Bazile Groundwater Management Area, $86,939, Matteo D’Alessio, Nebraska Water Center.
- Delivery of watershed science education to decision makers – a multi-agency collaboration, $71,751, Troy Gilmore, School of Natural Resources.
- The Master Naturalist program: expanding conservation capacity, $49,179, Dennis Ferraro, School of Natural Resources.
- Developing a decision-support tool for the successful incorporation of cover crops into Nebraska cropping systems, $41,530, Andrea Basche, agronomy and horticulture.
- Protecting the terns and plovers of Nebraska and mentoring the next generation, $21,355, Larkin Powell, School of Natural Resources.
- Milkweed in the Classroom, $18,069, Doug Golick, entomology.
- Student integrated forest and prairie management at Cedar Point Biological Station, $13,842, Jon Garbisch, School of Biological Sciences.
Dan Moser | Research and Economic Development
More details at: https://go.unl.edu/9yw9