Engaging the next generation of scientists
Partners in Science connects USGS scientists with the next generation of scientists while conducting meaningful research and data collection on river-based expeditions
Partners in Science is a collaborative effort between Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center, Grand Canyon Youth, and the National Park Service to provide opportunities for youth to engage in scientific field research in Grand Canyon. This partnership connects youth from diverse backgrounds with the Nation’s natural and cultural resources on 2-3 river-based expeditions on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon per year. The program also provides access to remote field sites for USGS scientists to conduct data collection and resource monitoring. Partners in Science trips have collected data in support of understanding nutrient dynamics, sandbar formation, aquatic algae and invertebrate ecology, bat foraging activity, fish biology, and various other research objectives. In 2022-2024, Partners in Science launched 3 indigenous trips that provided Native American youth time to explore their ancestral homelands, the Grand Canyon riverscape, and connect with each other. For over 20 years, Partners in Science has been a leader and model program in combining experiential learning with applied scientific data collection and field research.
WHAT YOU TAKE AWAY
Meet Katie, one of the 40 million people who depend on the Colorado River. Pondering life after high school, Katie finds comfort in reflecting on her time in one of the Nation’s most iconic National Parks. Guided by river currents, curiosity, and scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, her voyage of discovery leads to a deeper understanding of the Colorado River as an ecosystem, and her own place in it.
The Ripple Effect - Reflections from a scientist
Hydrologist Shannon Sartain joined a Partners in Science Trip to collect on-the-ground data to support research on debris flow risks to campers in Grand Canyon. In this blog post, Shannon reflects on her experience.
Secretary of Interior Sally Jewell joins Partners in Science expedition
"It’s traveling through the canyon, seeing things at an ecosystem level, that has helped me understand it." -Molly Ryan, PIS trip participant 2014
Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Projects
Bat foraging ecology along the Colorado River in Grand Canyon
Community Science in Grand Canyon
Bug Flows: Improving Food Web Health on the Colorado River
Dragonfly Larvae are Effective Bioindicators of Mercury Exposure in Fish and Amphibians—Results of Citizen Science in 100 National Parks and Protected Places
Expanded conceptual risk framework for uranium mining in Grand Canyon watershed—Inclusion of the Havasupai Tribe perspective
U.S. Geological Survey Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center: Proceedings of the fiscal year 2023 annual reporting meeting to the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program
Assessment of potential recovery viability for Colorado Pikeminnow Ptychocheilus lucius in the Colorado River in Grand Canyon
Applied citizen science in freshwater research
A national-scale assessment of mercury bioaccumulation in United States National Parks using dragonfly larvae as biosentinels through a citizen-science framework
A primer of fishery studies in Grand Canyon: The nonnative fish removal story
Dragonfly Mercury Project—A citizen science driven approach to linking surface-water chemistry and landscape characteristics to biosentinels on a national scale
2010 weather and aeolian sand-transport data from the Colorado River corridor, Grand Canyon, Arizona
Parasites of native and nonnative fishes of the Little Colorado River, Grand Canyon, Arizona
Debris flows from tributaries of the Colorado River, Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona
APPLICATION - Grand Canyon Sandbar Monitoring
APPLICATION - Grand Canyon Aquatic Ecology Web Application
Partners in Science is a collaborative effort between Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center, Grand Canyon Youth, and the National Park Service to provide opportunities for youth to engage in scientific field research in Grand Canyon. This partnership connects youth from diverse backgrounds with the Nation’s natural and cultural resources on 2-3 river-based expeditions on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon per year. The program also provides access to remote field sites for USGS scientists to conduct data collection and resource monitoring. Partners in Science trips have collected data in support of understanding nutrient dynamics, sandbar formation, aquatic algae and invertebrate ecology, bat foraging activity, fish biology, and various other research objectives. In 2022-2024, Partners in Science launched 3 indigenous trips that provided Native American youth time to explore their ancestral homelands, the Grand Canyon riverscape, and connect with each other. For over 20 years, Partners in Science has been a leader and model program in combining experiential learning with applied scientific data collection and field research.
WHAT YOU TAKE AWAY
Meet Katie, one of the 40 million people who depend on the Colorado River. Pondering life after high school, Katie finds comfort in reflecting on her time in one of the Nation’s most iconic National Parks. Guided by river currents, curiosity, and scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, her voyage of discovery leads to a deeper understanding of the Colorado River as an ecosystem, and her own place in it.
The Ripple Effect - Reflections from a scientist
Hydrologist Shannon Sartain joined a Partners in Science Trip to collect on-the-ground data to support research on debris flow risks to campers in Grand Canyon. In this blog post, Shannon reflects on her experience.