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*Zisman, Edward, D. and Daniel J. Clarey. 2013. [http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1109&context=sinkhole_2013 Problems Associated with the Use of Compaction Grout for Sinkhole Remediation in West-Central Florida].´13th Sinkhole Conference: NCKRI Symposium 2, May:23-26.   
 
*Zisman, Edward, D. and Daniel J. Clarey. 2013. [http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1109&context=sinkhole_2013 Problems Associated with the Use of Compaction Grout for Sinkhole Remediation in West-Central Florida].´13th Sinkhole Conference: NCKRI Symposium 2, May:23-26.   
 
*Zogorski, John S. 2006. Chapter 3 - VOCs in Groundwater. [https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/cir1292 Volatile Organic Compounds in the Nation's Ground Water and Drinking-Water Supply Wells]. Last modified 2006.
 
*Zogorski, John S. 2006. Chapter 3 - VOCs in Groundwater. [https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/cir1292 Volatile Organic Compounds in the Nation's Ground Water and Drinking-Water Supply Wells]. Last modified 2006.
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==References for stormwater ponds==
 +
*ASCE/EPA. [http://bmpdatabase.org/ International Stormwater Best Management Practices (BMP) Database].[http://www.bmpdatabase.org/]
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*Atlanta Regional Commission. 2001. [https://atlantaregional.org/natural-resources/water/georgia-stormwater-management-manual/ Georgia Stormwater Management Manual].
 +
*Caraco, D. and R. Claytor. 1997. [https://owl.cwp.org/mdocs-posts/caracod-_sw_bmp_design_cold_climates/ Stormwater BMP Design Supplement for Cold Climates]. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Center for Watershed Protection). 2004. [http://stormwatercenter.net/Manual_Builder/Maintenance_Manual/pondwetlandguidebookdraft.pdf Stormwater Pond and Wetland Maintenance Guidebook] (draft). Prepared for Tetra Tech, Inc. and USEPA Office of Science and Technology.
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*Metropolitan Council. 2001. Urban Small Sites Best Management Practice Manual.
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*Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. 2000. Protecting Water Quality in Urban Areas.
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*Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Permit No. MN R100001: General Permit Authorization to Discharge Stormwater Associated with Construction Activity under the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System / State Disposal System Permit Program. August 1, 2003.
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*Natural Resources Conservation Service. [https://www.harfordcountymd.gov/DocumentCenter/View/3997/Maryland-Dam-Safety-Regulations-MD-378-PDF#:~:text=CODE%20378%20(Reported%20in%20No.)&text=A%20water%20impoundment%20made%20by,referred%20to%20as%20excavated%20ponds. Conservation Practice Standard – Pond (Code 378)], February 2005.
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*[http://stormwatercenter.net/ Stormwater Manager’s Resource Center Web site], Construction Standards/Specifications for Ponds. www.stormwatercenter.net, site updated 2004.
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*Toronto and Region Conservation Authority SWAMP Program. Storm Water Management Facility Sediment Maintenance Guide. Prepared by Greenland International Consulting Company.
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*US Environmental Protection Agency (1999). [https://www3.epa.gov/npdes/pubs/maxstrg2.pdf Combined Sewer Overflow Technology Fact Sheet: Floatables Control]. United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. EPA 832-F99-008.
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*Vermont Agency of Natural Resources. April, 2002. [https://dec.vermont.gov/sites/dec/files/wsm/stormwater/docs/Permitinformation/2017%20VSMM_Rule_and_Design_Guidance_04172017.pdf The Vermont Stormwater Manual].
 +
*Weiss, P.T., J.S. Gulliver and A.J. Erickson. 2005. [http://www.lrrb.org/media/reports/200523.pdf The Cost and Effectiveness of Stormwater Management Practices: Final Report]. University of Minnesota, St. Anthony Falls Hydraulic Laboratory, Minneapolis, Minnesota. 99p.
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*Winer, R. 2000. [http://www.stormwatercenter.net/Library/STP-Pollutant-Removal-Database.pdf National Pollutant Removal Performance Database].
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==References for stormwater wetlands==
 +
*ASCE/EPA. [http://bmpdatabase.org/ International Stormwater Best Management Practices (BMP) Database].
 +
*Caraco, D. and R. Claytor. 1997. [http://vermont4evolution.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/ulm-elc_coldclimates.pdf Stormwater BMP Design Supplement for Cold Climates]. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
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*Center for Watershed Protection. 2004. [http://stormwatercenter.net/Manual_Builder/Maintenance_Manual/pondwetlandguidebookdraft.pdf Stormwater Pond and Wetland Maintenance Guidebook].
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*Federal Highway Administration. 1997. [http://environment.fhwa.dot.gov/ecosystems/ultraurb/index.asp Ultra-Urban Best Management Practices]. FHWA Ultra Urban BMP Manual. Washington, D.C.
 +
*MPCA. 2000. [https://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php?title=Protecting_Water_Quality_in_Urban_Areas:_Best_Management_Practices_for_Dealing_with_Storm_Water_Runoff_from_Urban,_Suburban,_and_Developing_Areas_of_Minnesota Protecting Water Quality in Urban Areas].
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*Natural Resources Conservation Service. [https://www.harfordcountymd.gov/DocumentCenter/View/3997/Maryland-Dam-Safety-Regulations-MD-378-PDF#:~:text=CODE%20378%20(Reported%20in%20No.)&text=A%20water%20impoundment%20made%20by,referred%20to%20as%20excavated%20ponds. Conservation Practice Standard 378].
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*Shaw, D. and R. Schmidt. 2003. [http://www.pca.state.mn.us/index.php/water/water-types-and-programs/stormwater/stormwater-management/plants-for-stormwater-design.html Plants for Stormwater Design]. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. St. Paul, MN.
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*Winer, R. 2000. [http://www.stormwatercenter.net/Library/STP-Pollutant-Removal-Database.pdf National Pollutant Removal Performance Database]. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
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*Young, G Kenneth, Stuart Stein, Pamela Cole, Traci Kammer, Frank Graziano, Fred Bank. 1996. [http://www.trb.org/Main/Public/Blurbs/158397.aspx Evaluation and Management of Highway Runoff Water Quality]. Office of Environment and Planning. Federal Highway Administration. Washington, D.C.
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==References for trees==
 +
This list contains references for all tree articles in the Manual.  Reference lists can also be found on each individual tree page.
 +
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*Allison, R.A., F.H.S. Chiew, and T. A. McMahon. 1998. ''Nutrient Contribution Of Leaf Litter In Urban stormwater''. Journal of Environmental Management. 54: 269-272.
 +
*Baker, Brent, D. M. Olszyk, and D. Tingey. 1996. ''Digital Image Analysis to Estimate Leaf Area''. Journal of Plant Physiology. 148: 530-535.
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*Baker, Donald G., W.W. Nelson, and E.L. Kuehnast. 1979. [http://conservancy.umn.edu/handle/11299/109293 Climate of Minnesota Part XII - The Hydrologic Cycle and Soil Water]. Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station Series/Report No.:  Technical Bulletin 322.
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*Bakker. J.W. 1983. ''Groeiplaats en watervoorziening van straatbomen''. Groen. 39(6)205-207; OBIS, 1988. Bomen in straatprofielen – Voorbeelden – Groeiplaatsberekening. Uitgeverij van de Vereniging van de Nederlandse gemeenten, ‘s-Gravenhage 1988. 63 p. Cited in Kopinga 1991.
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*Barret, M., M. Limouzin, and D. Lawler. 2011. ''Performance Comparison of Biofiltration Designs''. World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2011. pp. 395-404.
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*Bassuk, Nina. 2010. [https://www.ecolandscaping.org/01/developing-healthy-landscapes/soil/using-cu-structural-soil-to-grow-trees-surrounded-by-pavement/#:~:text=How%20Is%20It%20used%3F,the%20area%20under%20the%20dripline). Using CU-Structural Soil to Grow Trees Surrounded by Pavement]. In The Great Soil Debate Part II: Structural soils under pavement. ASLA Annual Meeting Handout.
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*Bassuk, Nina, Jason Grabosky, Anthony Mucciardi, and Gary Raffel. 2011. [http://www.hort.cornell.edu/uhi/research/articles/JArb37%284%29.pdf Ground-penetrating Radar Accurately Locates Tree Roots in Two Soil Media Under Pavement]. Arboriculture & Urban Forestry. 37(4): 160–166.
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*Bassuk, Nina, Jason Grabosky, and Peter Trowbridge]. 2005. [http://www.hort.cornell.edu/uhi/outreach/pdfs/custructuralsoilwebpdf.pdf Using CU-Structural Soil™ in the Urban Environment]. Urban Horticulture Institute, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.
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*Beven, Keith. 2012. ''In Rainfall-Runoff Modelling: The Primer''. Second Edition, by Keith Beven. 398-448. Chichester, UK. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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*Breen, P., L. Denman, P. May, and S. Leinster. 2004. ''Street trees as stormwater treatment measures''. In 2004 International Conference on Water Sensitive Urban Design – Cities as catchments 21-25 November 2004, 21-25 November 2004, Adelaide.
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*Breuer, L., K. Eckhardt, and H.-G. Frede. 2003. ''Plant parameter values for models in temperate climates''. Ecological Modelling. 169:237-293.
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*Busiahn, Jacob, and Sean Peterson. 2013. [https://urbanforestrysouth.org/resources/library/ttresources/all-you-need-to-know-about-community-gravel-beds All you need to Know about Community Gravel Beds]. University of Minnesota Department of Forest Resources.
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*Cappiella, Karen, Tom Schueler, and Tiffany Wright. 2006. [https://www.csu.edu/cerc/documents/UrbanWatershedForestryMaual-Part2-ConservingandPlantinTreesatDevelopmentSites.pdf Urban Watershed Forestry Manual Part 2]. Conserving and Planting Trees at Development Sites. Second in a Three-Part Manual Series on Using Trees to Protect and Restore Urban Watersheds. Prepared for and published by: United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry.
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*Center for Watershed Protection. 2006. [http://www.worldsweeper.com/Street/Studies/pdf/Law,N._Technical_Memorandum_Literature_Review.pdf Technical Memorandum 1 - Literature Review Research in Support of an Interim Pollutant Removal Rate for Street Sweeping and Storm Drain Cleanout Activities]. A project supported by the U.S. Chesapeake Bay Program Grant CB-97322201-0
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*Cescatti, A. 2007. ''Indirect estimates of canopy gap fraction based on the linear conversion of hemispherical photographs methodology and comparison with standard thresholding techniques''. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 143:1-12.
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*Chase, T. N., R. A. Pielke, T.G. F. Kittel, R. Nemani, and S. W. Running. 1996. ''Sensitivity of a general circulation model to global changes in leaf area index''. Journal of Geophysical Research 101:7393-7408.
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*Cheng, Lei, Zongxue Xu, Dingbao Wang, and Ximing Cai. 2011. ''Assessing interannual variability of evapotranspiration at the catchment scale using satellite‐based evapotranspiration data sets''. Water Resources Research 47: W09509.
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*Churchill, D. J., A. J. Larson, M. C. Dahlgreen, J. F. Franklin, P. F. Hessburg, and J. A. Lutz. 2013. ''Restoring forest resilience: From reference spatial patterns to silvicultural prescriptions and monitoring''. Forest Ecology and Management 291: 442-457.
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*Coder, Kim. 2007. [https://www.warnell.uga.edu/sites/default/files/publications/WSFNR-20-48C_Coder.pdf Soil Compaction Stress and Trees: Symptoms, Measures, and Treatments]. Warnell School Outreach Monograph WSFNR07-9.
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*Confalonieri, R., M. Foi, R. Casa, S. Aquaro, E. Tona, M. Peterle, A. Boldini, G. De Carli, A. Ferrari, G. Finotto, T. Guarneri, V. Manzoni, E. Movedi, A. Nisoli, L. Paleari, I. Radici, M. Suardi, D. Veronesi, S. Bregaglio, G. Cappelli, M.E. Chiodini, P. Dominonia, C. Francone, N. Frasso, T. Stella, and M. Acutis.  2013. ''Development of an app for estimating leaf area index using a smartphone. Truenss and precision determination and comparison with other indirect methods''. Computers and Electronics in Agriculture 96: 67-74.
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*Cowen W.F, Lee G.F. 1973. ''Leaves as a source of phosphorus''. Environ Sci Technol 7:853–854.
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*CRA. Tools for Agro-Meteorology and Biophysical Modelling: Evapotranspiration.
 +
*Couenberg Els. A.M. 1993. ''Amsterdam Tree Soil''. In: The Landscape Below Ground. Proceedings of an international workshop on tree root development in urban soils.
 +
*D'Arrigo, R. D., C. M. Malmstrom, G. C. Jacoby, S. O. Los, and D. E. Bunker. 2000. ''Correlation between maximum latewood density of annual tree rings and NDVI based estimates of forest productivity''. International Journal of Remote Sensing 21: 2329-2336.
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*Davis, A.P; W. F. Hunt, G.R. Traver, and M. Clar. 2009 ''Bioretention Technology: Overview of Current Practice and Future Needs''. J. Environ. Eng-ASCE. 135(3):109-117.
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*Day, S. D., and N. L. Bassuk. 1994. ''A review of the effects of soil compaction and amelioration treatments on landscape trees''. Journal of Arboriculture 20:9-17.
 +
*Denman, Liz. 2006. [https://cdn.treenet.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/06TS-ARE-STREET-TREES-AND-THEIR-SOILS-AN-EFFECTIVE-STORMWATER-TREATMENT-MEASURE_Liz-Denman.pdf Are Street Trees And Their Soils An Effective Stormwater Treatment Measure?] The 7th National Street Tree Symposium.
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*Denman, Elizabeth C., Peter B. May, and Gregory M. Moore. 2011. The use of trees in urban stormwater Management. Trees, people and the built environment: Proceedings of the Urban Trees Research Conference. 13–14 April 2011. Hosted by The Institute of Chartered Foresters At The Clarendon Suites, Edgbaston, Birmingham, UK Edited by Mark Johnston and Glynn Percival. Forestry Commission: Edinburgh.
 +
*Dorney JR. 1986. ''Leachable and total phosphorus in urban street tree leaves''. Water Air Soil Pollut 28:439–443.
 +
*DTAH, Lead Consultant, ARUP, Engineering, and James Urban, Urban Trees + Soils Urban Forest Innovations, Arborist. 2013. Tree Planting Solutions in Hard Boulevard Surfaces Best Practices Manual. Project # A21065. Prepared for: City of Toronto.
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*Dwyer, John F.; H.W. Schroeder, J.J. Louviere, and D.H. Anderson. 1989. ''Urbanities [sic] Willingness to Pay for Trees and Forests in Recreation Areas''. Journal of Arboriculture 15(10).
 +
*Dwyer, J. F.; Schroeder, H.W.; Gobster, P. H. 1991. ''The Significance of Urban Trees and Forests: Toward a Deeper Understanding of Values''. Journal of Arboriculture 17(10).
 +
*Dwyer, J. F., D. J. Nowak, M. H. Noble, and S. M. Sisinni. 2000. [http://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/pubs/pnw_gtr490.pdf Connecting people with ecosystems in the 21st centure: An assessment of our nation's urban forests]. USDA Forest Service Technical Report, Forest Service, USDA, USDA Forest Service.
 +
*Eichhorn, J., and P. Roskams. 2013. ''Chapter 8 - Assessment of Tree Conditions''. Developments in Environmental Science. 12:139-167.
 +
*Escobedo, F. J., and D. J. Nowak. 2009. ''Spatial heterogeneity and air pollution removal by an urban forest''. Landscape and Urban Planning 90:102-110.
 +
*Facility for Advancing Water Biofiltration (FAWB). 2009. [http://graie.org/SOCOMA/IMG/pdf/FAWB_Filter_media_guidelines_v3_June_2009-2.pdf Biofiltration Filter Media Guidelines (Version 3.01)].
 +
*Fassman, EA, R. Simcock, and S. Wang. 2013. [https://knowledgeauckland.org.nz/media/1616/tr2013-011-media-specification-for-stormwater-bioretention-devices.pdf Media specification for stormwater bioretention devices, Prepared by Auckland UniServices for Auckland Council. Auckland Council technical report, TR2013/011].
 +
*Flint, A. L., and S. W. Childs. 1991. ''Use of the Priestly-Taylor evaporation equation for soil water limited conditions in a small forest clearcut''. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 56. pp247-260.
 +
*Foster, R. S., and J. Blaine. 1978. Urban tree survival: trees in the sidewalk. Journal of Arboriculture 4:14-17.
 +
*Gillman, J.H. and G.R. Johnson. 1999. [https://extension.umn.edu/how/planting-and-transplanting-trees-and-shrubs Planting and Transplanting Trees and Shrubs]. University of Minnesota Extension WW-03825.
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*Gilman, Edward F. 2011. [https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/download/108273/103555 Specifications for Planting Trees and Shrubs in the Southeastern U.S.] Document ENH856. Environmental Horticulture, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida.
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*Gilman, E. 2011. [https://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/woody/sample-specs.shtml Sample nursery stock specification for shade trees].
 +
*Gilman, Edward F. 2013. [http://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/woody/abbreviated-planting-specs.shtml Sample planting specifications for trees]. Environmental Horticulture Department, University of Florida Gainesville.
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*Gilman, Ed. 2011. ''Illustrated Guide to Pruning''. 3rd edition. Cengage Learning: Independence, KY.
 +
*Gomez-Baggethun, E., and D. N. Barton. 2013. ''Classifying and valuing ecosystem services for urban planning''. Ecological Economics 86:235-245.
 +
*Gong, A., W. Xiang, Q. Zhengjun, and H. Yong. 2013. ''A handheld device for leaf area measurement''. Computers and Electronics in Agriculture 98:74-80.
 +
*Gonzales, L. M., J. W. Williams, and J. O. Kaplan. 2008. ''Variations in leaf area index in northern and eastern North Americal over the past 21,000 years: a data-model comparison''. Quaternary Science Reviews 27:1453-1466.
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*Grabosky, Jason, Edward Haffner, and Nina Bassuk. 2009. ''Plant Available Moisture in Stone-soil Media for Use Under Pavement While Allowing Urban Tree Root Growth''. Arboriculture & Urban Forestry 35(5):271-278.
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*Green, S. R. 1993. ''Radiation balance, transpiration, and photosynthesis of an isolated tree''. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 64:201-221.
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*Grimmond, C.S.B. and T.R. Oke. 1999. Evapotranspiration in Urban Areas. Proceedings of Impacts of Urban Growth on Surface Water and Groundwater Quality. Birmingham.
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*Gulliver, J. S., A. J. Erickson, and P. T. Weiss. 2010. [http://stormwaterbook.safl.umn.edu/ Evaporation and Evapotranspiration Stormwater Treatment: Assessment and Maintenance]. University of Minnesota, St. Anthony Falls Laboratory.
 +
*Healy, R. W., and B. R. Scanlon. 2010. ''Estimating Groundwater Recharge''. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
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*Heisler, G.M. 1986. [https://www.fs.usda.gov/treesearch/pubs/34773 Energy Savings With Trees]. Journal of Arboriculture 12:5:113-125.
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*Heisler, Gordon M. 1990. ''Tree plantings that save energy''. In: Rodbell, Philip D., ed. Proceedings of the Fourth Urban Forestry Conference, October 15-19, 1989. St. Louis, MO. Washington, DC: American Forestry Association.
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*Helliwell, D.R. 1986. ''The Extent of Tree Roots''. Arboriculture Journal 10:341-347. Updated in Letter to the Editor. Arboricultural Journal: The International Journal of Urban Forestry, Volume 16, Issue 2, 1992.
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*Helvey, J. D., and J. H. Patric. 1965. ''Canopy and litter interception of rainfall by hardwoods of Eastern United States''. Water Resources Research 1, No. 2: 193-206.
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*Henderson, C.F.K. 2008. ''The Chemical and Biological Mechanisms of Nutrient Removal from Stormwater in Bioretention Systems''. Thesis. Griffith School of Engineering, Griffith University.
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*Hermans, C., M. Smeyers, R. M. Rodriguez, M. Eyletters, M. Strasser, and J.-P. Delhaye. ''Quality assessment of urban trees: A comparitive study of physiological characterisation, airborne imaging and on site fluorescence monitoring by the OJIP-test''. Journal of Plant Physiology 160 (2003): 81-90.
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*Hickman, J.M. Jr. 2011. [https://www1.villanova.edu/content/dam/villanova/engineering/vcase/vusp/Hickmen-Thesis%202011.pdf Evaluating the Role of Evapotranspiration in the Hydrology of Bioinfiltration and bioretention Basins using Weighing Lysimeters]. M.S. thesis, Villanova University.
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*Hinman, C., and B. Wulkan. 2012. [https://www.ezview.wa.gov/Portals/_1965/Documents/Background/2012_LIDmanual_PSP.pdf Low Impact Development: Technical Guidance Manual for Puget Sound]. Publication No. PSP 2012-3.
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*Hobbie, Sarah E., Lawrence A. Baker, Christopher Buyarski, Daniel Nidzgorski, Jacques C. Finlay. 2013. ''Decomposition of tree leaf litter on pavement: implications for urban water quality''. Urban Ecosystems.  September issue.
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*Hofman, J., I. Stokkaer, L. Snauwaert, and R. Samson. 2012. ''Spatial distribution assessment of particulate matter in an urban street canyon using biomagnetic leaf monitoring of tree crown deposited particles''. Environmental Pollution, 2012: 1-10.
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*Hong, E., E.A. Seagren, and A. P. Davis. 2006. ''Sustainable Oil and Grease Removal from Synthetic Stormwater Runoff Using Bench-Scale Bioretention Studies''. Water Environ. Res. 78(2):141-155.
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*Imbert, D., and J. Portecop. 2008. ''Hurricane disturbance and forest resilience: Assessing structural vs. functional changes in a Caribbean dry forest''. Forest Ecology and Management. 255:3494-3501.
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*International Society of Arboriculture. 2010. Guide for Developing Planting Specifications.
 +
*Jenkins, J. K. G., Wadzuk, B. M., & Welker, A. L. 2010. ''Fines Accumulation and Distribution in a Storm-Water Rain Garden Nine Years Postconstruction''. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, 136(12):862-869.
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*Jim, C.-Y. 2005. ''Monitoring the performance and decline of heritage trees in urban Hong Kong''. Journal of Environmental Management. 74:161-172.
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*Jim, C.-Y. 2004. ''Spatial differentiation and landscape-ecological assessment of heritage trees in urban Guangzhou (China)''. Landscape and Urban Planning 69:51-68.
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*Jim, C.-Y., and H. Zhang. 2013. ''Defect-disorder and risk assessment of heritage trees in urban Hong Kong''. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening. In Press.
 +
*Jim, C.-Y., and H. Zhang. 2013. ''Species diversity and spatial differentiation of old-valuable trees in urban Hong Kong''. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening 12:171-182.
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*Johnson, Gary R. 1999. [https://conservancy.umn.edu/handle/11299/199785 Protecting Trees from Construction Damage]. University of Minnesota Extension publication WW-06135.
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*Johnson, Jill; Gary Johnson; Maureen McDonough; Lisa Burban; and Janette Monear. 2008. [https://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/19712 Tree Owner's Manual for the Northeastern Midwestern United States]. United States of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Area, State and Private Forestry, NA-FR-04-07.
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*Kalinosky, Paula. ,L. Baker, S. Hobbie. 2012. ''Quantifying Nutrient Load Reductions Through Targeted, Intensive Street Sweeping – A Field Study by the University of Minnesota in Partnership with the City of Prior Lake''. Abstract for Minnesota Water Resources Conference, October 17.
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*Kalinosky, Paula. Lawrence  A. Baker, Sarah Hobbie, and Ross Bintner. 2013a. [http://stormwater.safl.umn.edu/updates-march-2013 Quantifying Nutrient Removal through Targeted Intensive Street Sweeping]. UPDATES: March 2013 (volume 8 - issue 3).
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*Kalinosky, P., L. Baker, S. Hobbie. 2013b. ''Quantifying nutrient removal by street sweeping''. Presentation by  Paula Kalinosky at the 2013 International Low Impact Development Conference, St. Paul., August 18-21, 2013.
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*Kaplan, R.; and S. Kaplan. 1989. ''The Experience of Nature: A Psychological Perspective''. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.
 +
*Keim, Richard F. 2004. Comment on ''Measurement and modeling of growing-season canopy water fluxes in a mature mixed deciduous forest stand, southern Ontario, Canada''. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 124:277-279.
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*Kent, D., S. Shultz, T. Wyatt, and D. Halcrow. 2006. ''Soil Volume and Tree Condition in Walt Disney World Parking Lots''. Landscape Journal 25:1–06
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*Kirnbauer, M. C., B. W. Baetz, and W. A. Kenney. 2013. ''Estimating the stormwater attenuation benefits derived from planting four monoculture species of deciduous trees on vacant and underutilize urban landparcels''. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening. 12:401-407.
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*Kopinga, J. 1991. The Effect of Restricted Volumes of Soil on the Growth and development of Street Trees. Journal of Arboriculture 17(3):57-63
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*Kuo, F.; Sullivan,W. 2001. ''Environment and Crime in the Inner City: Does Vegetation Reduce Crime?''. Environment and Behavior 33(3).
 +
*Law, B. E., A. Cescatti, and D. Baldocchi. 2001. ''Leaf area distribution and radiative transfer in open-canopy forests: implications for mass and energy exchange''. Tree Physiology 21:777-787.
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*Law, Neely L. Katie DiBlasi, Upal Ghosh, With contributions from: Bill Stack, Steve Stewart,Ken Belt, Rich Pouyat, and Clair Welty. 2008. [http://www.worldsweeper.com/Street/Studies/CWPStudy/CBStreetSweeping.pdf Deriving Reliable Pollutant Removal Rates for Municipal Street Sweeping and Storm Drain Cleanout Programs in the Chesapeake Bay Basin]. Prepared by the Center for Watershed Protection as fulfillment of the U.S. EPA Chesapeake Bay Program grant CB-973222-01.
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*Lenth, John and Rebecca Dugopolski (Herrera Environmental Consultants), Marcus Quigley, Aaron Poresky, and Marc Leisenring (Geosyntec Consultants). 2010. ''Filterra® Bioretention Systems: Technical Basis for High Flow Rate Treatment and Evaluation of Stormwater Quality Performance''. Prepared for Americast, Inc.
 +
*Li, H., & Davis, A. P. 2008. ''Urban Particle Capture in Bioretention Media. I: Laboratory and Field Studies''. Journal of Environmental Engineering. 134(6):409-418.
 +
*Lindsey, P., and N. Bassuk. 1992. [http://www.hort.cornell.edu/uhi/research/articles/ArborJournal16.pdf Redesigning the urban forest from the ground below: a new approach to specifying adequate soil volumes for street trees]. Arboricultural Journal 16:25-39.
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*Lindsey, P. and N. Bassuk. 1991. [http://www.hort.cornell.edu/uhi/research/articles/JArb17%286%29.pdf Specifying Soil Volumes to Meet the Water Needs of Mature Urban Street Trees and Trees in Containers]. Journal of Arboriculture 17(6): 141-149.
 +
*Lindsey, Patricia, Ed. 1994. [http://ucanr.edu/sites/EH_RIC/newsletters/Vol1_No2_199437635.pdf The Design of Structural Soil Mixes for Trees in Urban Areas – Part II]. Growing Points 1(2). University of California.
 +
*Loh, F.C.W., J.C. Grabosky, and N.L. Bassuk. 2003. [http://www.hort.cornell.edu/uhi/research/articles/UrbForUrbGr%282%292003.pdf Growth Response of Ficus Benjamina to Limited Soil Volume and Soil Dilution in a Skeletal Soil Container Study]. In Urban For. Urban Gree. 2(1):53-62.
 +
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 +
==References for general stormwater information==
 +
*[http://www.bmpdatabase.org/ ASCE/EPA International Stormwater Best Management Practices (BMP) Database].
 +
*[http://www.atlantaregional.com/ Atlanta Regional Commission], 2001. [http://www.atlantaregional.com/environment/georgia-stormwater-manual/ Georgia Stormwater Management Manual].
 +
*Caraco, D. and R. Claytor. 1997. [http://vermont4evolution.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/ulm-elc_coldclimates.pdf Stormwater BMP Design Supplement for Cold Climates]. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Center for Watershed Protection (CWP), 2004. [http://stormwatercenter.net/Manual_Builder/Maintenance_Manual/pondwetlandguidebookdraft.pdf Stormwater Pond and Wetland Maintenance Guidebook] (draft). Prepared for Tetra Tech, Inc. and USEPA Office of Science and Technology.
 +
*Metropolitan Council, 2001. Urban Small Sites Best Management Practice Manual.
 +
*Minnesota Department of Agriculture. 2012. [https://www.mda.state.mn.us/protecting/cleanwaterfund/research/handbookupdate The Agricultural BMP Handbook for Minnesota].
 +
*Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, 2000. [https://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php?title=Protecting_Water_Quality_in_Urban_Areas:_Best_Management_Practices_for_Dealing_with_Storm_Water_Runoff_from_Urban,_Suburban,_and_Developing_Areas_of_Minnesota Protecting Water Quality in Urban Areas].
 +
*Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. [https://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php?title=Construction_stormwater_program Permit] No. MN R100001: General Permit Authorization to Discharge Stormwater Associated with Construction Activity under the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System / State Disposal System Permit Program. August 1, 2013.
 +
*Natural Resources Conservation Service. [https://www.harfordcountymd.gov/DocumentCenter/View/3997/Maryland-Dam-Safety-Regulations-MD-378-PDF#:~:text=CODE%20378%20(Reported%20in%20No.)&text=A%20water%20impoundment%20made%20by,referred%20to%20as%20excavated%20ponds. Conservation Practice Standard – Pond (Code 378)], February 2005.
 +
*Stormwater Manager’s Resource Center Web site, [http://stormwatercenter.net/Manual_Builder/Construction%20Specifications/Pond%20Standards%20and%20Specs.htm Construction Standards/Specifications for Ponds].
 +
*[https://sustainabletechnologies.ca/about-step/about-swamp/ Toronto and Region Conservation Authority SWAMP Program]. Storm Water Management Facility Sediment Maintenance Guide. Prepared by Greenland International Consulting Company.
 +
*US Environmental Protection Agency (1999). [http://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyNET.exe/200044AU.TXT?ZyActionD=ZyDocument&Client=EPA&Index=1995+Thru+1999&Docs=&Query=&Time=&EndTime=&SearchMethod=1&TocRestrict=n&Toc=&TocEntry=&QField=&QFieldYear=&QFieldMonth=&QFieldDay=&IntQFieldOp=0&ExtQFieldOp=0&XmlQuery=&File=D%3A%5Czyfiles%5CIndex%20Data%5C95thru99%5CTxt%5C00000015%5C200044AU.txt&User=ANONYMOUS&Password=anonymous&SortMethod=h%7C-&MaximumDocuments=1&FuzzyDegree=0&ImageQuality=r75g8/r75g8/x150y150g16/i425&Display=p%7Cf&DefSeekPage=x&SearchBack=ZyActionL&Back=ZyActionS&BackDesc=Results%20page&MaximumPages=1&ZyEntry=1&SeekPage=x&ZyPURL Combined Sewer Overflow Technology Fact Sheet: Floatables Control]. United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC. EPA 832-F99-008.
 +
*[https://dec.vermont.gov/sites/dec/files/wsm/stormwater/docs/Permitinformation/2017%20VSMM_Rule_and_Design_Guidance_04172017.pdf Vermont Agency of Natural Resources], April, 2002. The Vermont Stormwater Manual.
 +
*Weiss, P.T., J.S. Gulliver and A.J. Erickson, 2005. [http://www.lrrb.org/media/reports/200523.pdf The Cost and Effectiveness of Stormwater Management Practices: Final Report]. University of Minnesota, St. Anthony Falls Hydraulic Laboratory, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 99p.
 +
*Winer, R. [http://www.stormwaterok.net/CWP%20Documents/CWP-07%20Natl%20Pollutant%20Removal%20Perform%20Database.pdf National Pollutant Removal Performance Database], 2000.
 +
 +
==References for Unified Sizing Criteria==
 +
* American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). 2003. [https://bmpdatabase.org/ International Database on Pollutant Removal Performance of Stormwater Best Management Practices.]
 +
* Booth, D. and P. Henshaw. 2001. [http://faculty.washington.edu/dbooth/Booth_Henshaw_AGU_Land_Use_Watersheds.PDF Rates of channel erosion in small urban streams]. Water Science and Application 2:17-38.
 +
* Brown, T. and J. Simpson. 2001. ''Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes I: Determining the Trophic State of Your Lake. Watershed Protection Techniques''. 3 (4): 771-781. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* Cappiella, K., Schueler, T.R. and T. Wright. 2005. [https://nemonet.uconn.edu/images/resources/FREMO/completepart1forestrymanual.pdf Urban Watershed Forestry Manual. Part 1: Methods for Increasing Forest Cover in a Watershed]. USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry, Newtown Square, PA.
 +
* Cappiella, K., Schueler, T.R. and T. Wright. 2005. [https://www.csu.edu/cerc/documents/UrbanWatershedForestryMaual-Part2-ConservingandPlantinTreesatDevelopmentSites.pdf Urban Watershed Forestry Manual. Part 2: Conserving and Planting Trees at Development Sites.] USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry, Newtown Square, PA.
 +
* Caraco, D. 2001. [https://owl.cwp.org/mdocs-posts/caracod-_evaluating_the_impact_of_watershed_treatment/ Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes III: Evaluating the Impact of Watershed Treatment.] Watershed Protection Techniques. 3 (4): 791-796. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* Caraco, D. and T. Brown. 2001. ''Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes II: Crafting an Accurate Phosphorus Budget for Your Lake''. Watershed Protection Techniques. 3 (4): 782-790. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 1999. ''Nutrient Loading from Conventional and Innovative Site Development''. Chesapeake Research Consortium. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 2001. [http://www.epa.gov/owow/NPS/wpt/vol1no2.pdf ''Special Issue on Urban Lake Management: Watershed Protection Techniques''] 3(4): 745-820.
 +
* Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 2003. [https://owl.cwp.org/mdocs-posts/impacts-of-impervious-cover-on-aquatic-systems-2003/ The Impacts of Impervious Cover on Aquatic Systems. Watershed Protection Research Monograph No. 1.] Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD. 142 pp.
 +
* Center for Watershed Protection. (CWP). 2004. [https://owl.cwp.org/mdocs-posts/urban-subwatershed-restoration-manual-series-manual-1/ An Integrated Framework to Restore Urban Small Urban Watersheds. Manual 1.] Urban Subwatershed Restoration Manual Series. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* Debo, T. and A. Reese. 1992. ''Determining downstream analysis limits for detention facilities''. Proceedings from International Conference on Innovative Technologies in the Domain of Urban Stormwater Drainage.
 +
* Emmons & Olivier Resources, Inc. (EOR). 2000. ''Brown’s Creek Second Generation Watershed Management Plan''.
 +
* Galli, J. 1990. [https://www.mwcog.org/documents/1990/12/12/thermal-impacts-associated-with-urbanization-and-stormwater-management-best-management-practices/ Thermal Impacts Associated with Urbanization and Stormwater Management Best Management Practices]. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, Washington, D.C.
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* Horner, R., D. Booth, A. Azous, and C. May. 1996. Watershed Determinants of Ecosystem Functioning. In L. A. Roesner (ed.). ''Effects of Watershed Development and Management on Aquatic Ecosystems'': Proceedings of an Engineering Foundation Conference. Snowbird, UT: American Society of Civil Engineers.
 +
* Johnson, K. 1995. ''Urban Storm Water Impacts on a Coldwater Resource''. Presentation to the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) Second World Congress. Vancouver, B.C., Canada.
 +
* Leopold, L. B. 1994. ''A View of a River''. Harvard University Press. Cambridge, MA.
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* Leopold, L., M. Wolman, and J. Miller. 1964. ''Fluvial Processes in Geomorphology''. W.H. Freeman and Company. San Francisco, CA.
 +
* MacRae, C. 1993. ''An alternate design approach for the control of instream erosion potential in urbanizing watersheds''. pp. 1086-1091. In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Urban Storm Drainage. Niagra Falls, Ontario. Marsalek and Torno (eds.).
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* MacRae, C. 1996. ''Experience from morphological research on Canadian streams: is control of the two-year frequency runoff event the best basis for stream channel protection?''. In Effects of Watershed Development and Management on Aquatic Systems . L. Roesner (ed.) Engineering Foundation Conference. Proceedings. Snowbird, UT. August 4-9, 1996. pp. 144-160.
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* McCuen R. and G. Moglen. 1988. ''Multicriterion stormwater management methods''. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management. (114) 4.
 +
* Metropolitan Council (MC). 2001. [https://metrocouncil.org/Wastewater-Water/Planning/Water-Resources-Management/Water-Quality-Management-Key-Roles.aspx Minnesota Urban Small Sites BMP Manual: Stormwater Best Management Practices for Cold Climates.] Metropolitan Council Environmental Services. St. Paul. MN.
 +
* Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA). 2000. [https://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php?title=Protecting_Water_Quality_in_Urban_Areas:_Best_Management_Practices_for_Dealing_with_Storm_Water_Runoff_from_Urban,_Suburban,_and_Developing_Areas_of_Minnesota Protecting Water Quality in Urban Areas.] St Paul. MN.
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* Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA). 2004. ''2004 Final List of Impaired Waters''.
 +
* Pitt, R. 1989. [http://rpitt.eng.ua.edu/Publications/UrbanHyandCompsoils/small%20storm%20hydrology%20Pitt%20james98.pdf Small Storm Hydrology: The integration of flow and water quality for management practices]. University of Alabama-Birmingham.
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* Pitt, R., A. Maestre and R. Morquecho. 2004. [http://rpitt.eng.ua.edu/Research/ms4/Paper/MS4%20Feb%2016%202004%20paper.pdf The National Stormwater Quality Database (NSQD, version 1.1).] University of Alabama. Tuscaloosa, AL.
 +
* Roa-Espinosa, A., T. Wilson, J. Norman, and K. Johnson. 2003. [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/241769213_Predicting_the_impact_of_urban_development_on_stream_temperature_using_a_thermal_urban_runoff_model_TURM Predicting the Impact of Urban Development of Stream Temperature using a Thermal Urban Runoff Model (TURM).] National Conference on Urban Storm Water: Enhancing Programs at the Local Level. Proceedings. Chicago, IL.
 +
* Schueler, T. 1987. ''Controlling urban runoff: a practical manual for planning and designing urban best management practices''. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.Washington, DC.
 +
* Schueler, T. 1992. ''Design of Stormwater Wetland Systems''. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. Washington, D.C.
 +
* Schueler, T. 2000a. [https://www.stormwatercenter.net/Practice/106-Further%20Sand%20Filter.pdf Further Developments in Sand Filter Technology.] Watershed Protection Techniques. 3(3): 707-716. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* Schueler, T. 2000b. [https://owl.cwp.org/mdocs-posts/elc_pwp33/ The Impact of Stormwater on Puget Sound Wetlands]. In T. Schueler and H. Holland, eds. 2000: The Practice of Watershed Protection. Center for Watershed Protection.] Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* Schueler, T. and K. Brown. 2004. [https://www.bebuffered.com/downloads/center_watershed_protection_urban_stream.pdf 4 Manual 4: Urban Stream Repair Practices. Urban Subwatershed Restoration Manual Series. ]Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* South St. Louis Soil and Water Conservation District. 2001. [https://www.lakesuperiorstreams.org/archives/MILLER_final.pdf Miller Creek Diagnostic Study and Implementation Plan: Clean Water Partnership Phase I Report.]
 +
* State of Maryland. 2000. [https://mde.maryland.gov/programs/water/stormwatermanagementprogram/pages/stormwater_design.aspx Maryland Stormwater Design Manual. Volume I and II.] Maryland Department of Environment. Baltimore, MD.
 +
* State of Minnesota Storm-Water Advisory Group. 1997. [https://owl.cwp.org/mdocs-posts/stormwater-and-wetlands-planning-and-evaluation-guidelines-for-addressing-potential-impacts-of-urban-stormwater-and-snow-melt-runoff-on-wetlands/ Storm-Water and Wetlands: Planning and Evaluation Guidelines for Addressing Potential Impacts of Urban Storm-Water and Snow-Melt Runoff on Wetlands.]
 +
* State of Wisconsin. 2004. [https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/code/admin_code/nr/100/151 NR-151: Runoff management: Non-agricultural Performance Standards.] Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. July, 2004. No. 583.
 +
* USDA. 1986. [https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb1044171.pdf TR-55 Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds TR-55 Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds.]
 +
* U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA). 1993. [https://www.csu.edu/cerc/documents/NATURALWETLANDSANDURBANSTORMWATERPOTENTIALIMPACTSANDMANAGEMENT1993.pdf Natural Wetlands and Urban Storm water: Potential Impacts and Management.]
 +
* United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA). 1980. [https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyNET.exe/2000M1GW.TXT?ZyActionD=ZyDocument&Client=EPA&Index=1976+Thru+1980&Docs=&Query=&Time=&EndTime=&SearchMethod=1&TocRestrict=n&Toc=&TocEntry=&QField=&QFieldYear=&QFieldMonth=&QFieldDay=&IntQFieldOp=0&ExtQFieldOp=0&XmlQuery=&File=D%3A%5Czyfiles%5CIndex%20Data%5C76thru80%5CTxt%5C00000003%5C2000M1GW.txt&User=ANONYMOUS&Password=anonymous&SortMethod=h%7C-&MaximumDocuments=1&FuzzyDegree=0&ImageQuality=r75g8/r75g8/x150y150g16/i425&Display=hpfr&DefSeekPage=x&SearchBack=ZyActionL&Back=ZyActionS&BackDesc=Results%20page&MaximumPages=1&ZyEntry=1&SeekPage=x&ZyPURL Our Nation’s Lakes.] Office of Water. Washington, D.C. EPA-440-5-80-009.
 +
* Walker, 1987. [http://www.wwwalker.net/pdf/spwudes.pdf Design calculations for Wet Ponds. Prepared for St. Paul Water Utility and Vadnais Lake Area Water Management Organization,] St Paul, MN.
 +
* Washington County Water Consortium (WCWC). 2003. ''Comparative review of watershed district rules and recommendations for standardization''. Washington County Office of Administration.
 +
* Winer, R. 2000. [http://stormwatercenter.net/Library/STP%20Database%20Article.pdf National Pollutant Removal Database for Stormwater Treatment Practices: 2nd Edition.] Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
* Winer, R. and J. Zielinski. 2003. [https://dnr.maryland.gov/criticalarea/Documents/10_percent_rule/manual.pdf Critical Area 10% Rule Guidance Manual: Maryland Chesapeake and Atlantic Coastal Bays.] Center for Watershed Protection. Critical Area Commission, Annapolis, MD.
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 +
 +
==Original Stormwater Manual references==
 +
This page provides a list of references from the original Minnesota Stormwater Manual, published in 2005. More recent references are contained within the individual pages and sections of the manual as updates are made to the manual.
 +
 +
*Aichinger, C., 2004. Understanding the West Nile Virus. Woodbury Bulletin (newspaper opinion page), August 11, 2004. Contact Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District, North St. Paul, MN.
 +
*Alexander, E.C. and Y. Gao, 2002. Copyrighted graphic of Minnesota Karst Lands.
 +
*Allen P. and R. Narramore. 1985. Bedrock controls on stream channel enlargement with urbanization, North Central Texas. Water Resources Bulletin. 21(6): 1037-1048.
 +
*American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). 2003. International database on pollutant removal performance of stormwater best management practices.
 +
*Andrews, W.J., J.R. Stark, A.L. Fong and P.E. Hanson, 1999. Ground-water quality along a flowpath in surficial outwash aquifer in the Upper Mississippi River Basin – The influence of land use. Hydrological Science and Technology, 15(1-4):66-75. Special Issue: 4thUSA/CIS Joint Conference, November 7-10, 1999, San Francisco. American Institute of Hydrology.
 +
*Aplikowski, S., J. Hafner, and B. Wilson. 2005. Minneapolis Chain of Lakes: A decade of Watershed Rehabilitation. Lakeline. Spring 2005.Aquafor Beech Ltd. 1999. Draft Final Stormwater Management Planning and Design Manual. Ontario Ministry of the Environment.
 +
*Arendt, R. 1997. Designing Open Space Subdivisions. Natural Lands Trust. Media, PA
 +
*Avinmelich, Y., J. McHenry and J. Ross. 1984. Decomposition of Organic Matter in Lake Sediments. Environmental Science and Technology.
 +
*Bäckström, M., 2002. Series of Papers in Doctorate Thesis, Luleå University of Technology.
 +
*Bäckström, M., 1999. Series of Papers in Licentiate Thesis, Luleå University of Technology.
 +
*Baker, D.G., W.W. Nelson and E.L. Kuehnast, 1979. Climate of Minnesota: Part XII – The Hydrologic Cycle and Soil Water. University of Minnesota, Agricultural Experiment Station, St. Paul, MN.
 +
*Baker, J.M., 1997. Vanishing Ponds Not a Sure Sign of Spring. Agricultural Research, April, p.9.
 +
*Barodziej, W. and S. Blood. 2004. Shore Restoration of a High-use Urban Lake.
 +
*Bengtsson, L., 1981. Snowmelt-Generated Runoff in Urban Areas. In Proceedings, Second International Conference on Urban Storm Drainage, Urbana, Illinois, June 14-19, 1981, pp.444-451.
 +
*Bledsoe, B. 2001. Relationships of stream response to hydrologic changes. Linking Stormwater BMP Designs and Performance to Receiving Water Impacts Mitigation Proceedings. Snowmass, CO.
 +
*Booth, D. and P. Henshaw. 2001. Rates of channel erosion in small urban streams. Water Science and Application 2:17-38.
 +
*Booth, D. 1990. Stream channel incision following drainage basin urbanization. Water Resources Bulletin. 26(3): 407-417.
 +
*Bouwer, H. and R. C. Rice. 1989. Effect of Water Depth in Ground-water Recharge Basins on Infiltration. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, Vol. 115, No. 4, pp. 556-567.
 +
*Brown, E., D. Caraco and R. Pitt, 2004. Illicit Discharge Detection and Elimination: A Guidance Manual for Program Development and Technical Assessment. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Brown, T. and J. Simpson. 2001. “Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes I: Determining the Trophic State of Your Lake.” Watershed Protection Techniques. 3 (4): 771-781. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Brown, W. and T. Schueler, 1997. Economics of stormwater best management practices in the Mid-Atlantic region. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Burton, G. and R. Pitt. 2002. Stormwater effects handbook: a toolbox for watershed managers, scientists and engineers. CRC/Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, FL.
 +
*Busacker, G. 2004. Protecting Water Resources Based on a Collaborative Community Effort. AASHTO National Environmental Stewardship Competition Application.
 +
*Buttle, J.M., 1990. Effect of suburbanization upon snowmelt runoff. Hydrol. Sci. Jour., 35(3):285-302.
 +
*Buttle, J.M. and F. Xu, 1988. Snowmelt Runoff in Suburban Environments. Nordic Hydrology, 19:19-40.
 +
*Cappiella, K. 2005. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual Part 1: Conserving Trees at the Watershed Scale. Prepared for: USDA Forest Service. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Cappiella, K. 2005. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual Part 1: Conserving Trees at the Watershed Scale. Prepared for: USDA Forest Service. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Capiella, K, T. Schueler and T. Wright. 2005. Conserving and planting trees at development sites. USDA Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD
 +
*Cappiella, K., Schueler, T.R. and T. Wright. 2005. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual. Part 1: Methods for Increasing Forest Cover in a Watershed. USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry. Newtown Square, PA.
 +
*Cappiella, K., Schueler, T.R. and T. Wright. 2005. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual. Part 2: Conserving and Planting Trees at Development Sites. USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry. Newtown Square, PA.
 +
*Capuccitti, D and W. Page, 2000. Stream response to stormwater management best management practices in Maryland. Maryland Department of the Environment. Final Deliverable for a US EPA 319 Grant.
 +
*Caraco, D. 2001. “Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes III: Evaluating the Impact of Watershed Treatment.” Watershed Protection Techniques. 3 (4): 791-796. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Caraco, D. and R. Claytor, 1997. Stormwater BMP Design Supplement for Cold Climates. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, Maryland.
 +
*Caraco, D. and T. Brown. 2001. “Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes II: Crafting an Accurate Phosphorus Budget for Your Lake.” Watershed Protection Techniques. 3 (4): 782-790. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Carroll County, MD. 1996a. Draft Water Resource Management Manual.
 +
*Carroll County, MD. 1996b. Draft Water Resource Management Ordinance.
 +
*Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 1998. Better Site Design: a handbook for changing development rules in your community. US EPA. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 1998. Nutrient Loading From Conventional and Innovative Site Development. Prepared for: Chesapeake Research Consortium. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 1999. Nutrient loading from conventional and innovative site development. Chesapeake Research Consortium. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 2001. Special Issue on Urban Lake Management: Watershed Protection Techniques 3(4): 745-820.
 +
*Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 2003. The impacts of impervious cover on aquatic systems. Watershed Protection Research Monograph No. 1. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD. 142 pp. 11: 165-206.
 +
*Chang, M., M. McBroom, R. Beasley. 2004. Roofing as a source of nonpoint water pollution. Journal of Environmental Management. 73: 307-315.
 +
*Chicago Wilderness and Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission, 2003. [https://www.cmap.illinois.gov/documents/10180/49967/Resource+Manual.pdf/b7cc9d90-d47b-4bb0-99a3-c28dbc0608f9 Conservation Design Resource Manual].
 +
*Chollak, T and R. Rosenfield 1998. Guide for landscaping with compost amended soils. Department of Public Works. City of Redmond, WA
 +
*City of Minneapolis. 2004. City of Minneapolis Heritage Park: Near North Wetlands and Stormwater Management 2005 CIP Budget Documentation (and associated educational flyers).
 +
*City of Portland. 2004. Portland’s Stormwater Management Manual. Bureau of Environmental Services. Portland Oregon. www.cleanrivers-pdx.org/tech_resources/2004_swmm.htm
 +
*City of Seattle, 2003. How soil amendments and compost can aid in Salmon recovery.
 +
*Colbeck, S.C., 1981. A simulation of the enrichment of atmospheric pollutants in snow cover runoff. Water Res. Research, 17(5): 1383-1388.
 +
*Colbeck, S.C., 1991. The layered character of snow covers. Rev. Geophys., 29(1):81-96.
 +
*Commonwealth of Virginia, 2003. Vector Control: Mosquitoes and Storm Water Management. Stormwater Management Technical Bulletin No 8.
 +
*Conservation Toronto and Region, 2001. [https://sustainabletechnologies.ca/app/uploads/2013/01/SWPP-Handbook.pdf The Storm Water Pollution Prevention Handbook]. Copublished with the Ontario Ministry of the Environment.
 +
*Covington, M. 2002. Modified Sand Filter Design (The Herring/Frock Method). Presented at Delaware Sediment and Stormwater 2002 Conference – The Race for Clean Water. Dover, DE.
 +
*Debo, T. and A. Reese. 1992. Determining downstream analysis limits for detention facilities. Proceedings from International Conference on Innovative Technologies in the Domain of Urban Stormwater Drainage.
 +
*Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation (DE DNREC). 1997. Conservation Design for Stormwater Management. Dover, DE.
 +
*Dreher, D, and T. Price. 1994. Reducing the Impact of Urban Runoff: The Advantages of Alternative Site Design Approaches. Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission. Chicago, IL.
 +
*Dewberry and Davis, Inc. 1990. Toxicity of Sediments from BMP Ponds. Final Report. Northern Virginia Planning District Commission. 42 pp.
 +
*Dorman, M., J. Hartigan, R. Steg, and T. Quaserbarth. 1989. Retention, Detention, and Overland Flow for Pollutant Removal from Highway Stormwater Runoff. Federal Highway Administration Report No. RD-89-202. 179 pp.
 +
*Duke, D. and K. Shaver. 1999. “Widespread Failure to Comply with U.S. Storm Water Regulations for Industry-Part II: Facility-Level Evaluations to Estimate Number of Regulated Facilities.” Environmental Engineering Science. Vol. 16(4).
 +
*Duke, D., K. Patel, and B. Masek. 1999. “Widespread Failure to Comply with U.S. Storm Water Regulations for Industry-Part I: Publicly Available Data to Estimate Number of Potentially Regulated Facilities.” Environmental Engineering Science. Vol. 16(4).
 +
*Dunne, T. and R.D. Black, 1971. Runoff Processes during Snowmelt. Water Resources Research, 7(5): 1160-1172.
 +
*Emmons & Olivier Resources, Inc. (EOR). 2000. Brown’s Creek Second Generation Watershed Management Plan.
 +
*Emmons and Olivier Resources, Inc. 2004. Trout Habitat Preservation Project (THPP) 2004 MAWD Project and Program of the Year Nomination Form.
 +
*Ferguson, B. and T. Debo. 1990. On-site Stormwater Management: Applications for Landscape and Engineering. 2nd Edition. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
 +
*Fillmore Soil and Water Conservation District. 1998. City of Wykoff Sinkhole/Stormw Water Discharge Project. MN BWSR FY 99 State Cost Share Special Project Application.
 +
*Finkenbine, J., J. Atwater and D. Mavinic. 2000. Stream health after urbanization. Journal of the American Water Resources Association 36(5): 1149-1160.
 +
*Fish, W. 1988. Behavior of Runoff-Derived Metals in a Well-Fined Paved Catchment/Retention Pond System. Water Resources Research Institute Report No. 103. Oregon State University. 54 pp.
 +
*Galli, J. 1988. A limnological Study of an Urban Stormwater Management Pond and Stream Ecosystem. M.S. Thesis. Department of Biology. George Mason University. Fairfax, Virginia.
 +
*Galli, J. 1990. Thermal Impacts Associated with Urbanization and Stormwater Management Best Management Practices. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. Washington, D.C.
 +
*Galli, J. 1993. Analysis of Urban Best Management Practice Performance and Longevity in Prince George’s County, Maryland. 202 pp.
 +
*Gavens, A., D. Revitt, and J. Ellis. 1982. Hydrocarbon Accumulation in Freshwater Sediments of an Urban Catchment. Hydrobiologia (91): 285-292.
 +
*Georgia (State of), 2001. [https://atlantaregional.org/natural-resources/water/georgia-stormwater-management-manual/ Stormwater Management Manual].
 +
*Giesy, J. and R. Hoke. 1991. Freshwater Sediment Quality Criteria: Toxicity Bioassessment in Sediments: Chemistry and Toxicity of In-Place Pollutants. R. Baudo, R. Giesy, and H. Muntau, Editors. Lewis Publishers.
 +
*Granger, R.J., D.M. Gray and G.E. Dick, 1984. Snowmelt Infiltration to Frozen Soils. Canadian Journal of Earth Science, 21:669-677.
 +
*Great Lakes Association. Percent Bedrock Outcrop of Landtype Associations of Northern Minnesota Map.
 +
*Grizzard, etal. 1983. Final Monitoring Report for Washington Metropolitan Area Nationwide Urban Runoff Project. Chapter 7. Occuquan Watershed Monitoring Lab. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.
 +
*Grizzard, T. 1989. Memorandum dated 22 March 1989. Detention Basin Spoil Disposal Near Twin Beech Court. OWML. Manassas, Virginia. 5 pp.
 +
*Haan, C., B. Barfield, J. Hayes, 1994. Design Hydrology and Sedimentology for Small Catchments. Academic Press, San Diego.
 +
*Hammer, T. 1972. Stream channel enlargement due to urbanization. Water Resources Research 8(6): 1530-1540.
 +
*Harper, H. 1988. Effects of Stormwater Management Systems on Groundwater Quality. Final Report. Environmental Research and Design, Inc. Florida Department of Environmental Regulation. 460 pp.
 +
*Hershfield, D.M., 1961. Rainfall Frequency Atlas of the United States for Durations from 30 Minutes to 24 Hours and Return Periods from 1 to 100 Years. U.S. Weather Bureau, Technical Publication 40.
 +
*Hogland, W., M. Marques, and V. Karlaviciene. 2003. Stormwater Runoff From Industrial Areas and Pollution Transport. Proceedings from 1st International Conference on Urban Drainage and Highway Runoff in Cold Climate. Riksgränsen, Sweden.
 +
*Hollis, F. 1975. The effects of urbanization on floods of different recurrence intervals. Water Resources Research, 11:431-435.
 +
*Holmgren, etal. 1993. Cadmium, Lead, Zinc, Copper and Nickel in Agricultural Soils (USA). Journal of Environmental Quality. 22:335-348.
 +
*Horner, R., D. Booth, A. Azous, and C. May. 1996. Watershed Determinants of Ecosystem Functioning. In L. A. Roesner (ed.), Effects of Watershed Development and Management on Aquatic Ecosystems: Proceedings of an Engineering Foundation Conference. Snowbird, UT: American Society of Civil Engineers.
 +
*Horsely, S. 1996. Memorandum dated July 10, 1996. Methods for Calculating Pre and Post Development Recharge Rates. Prepared for State of Massachusetts Stormwater Technical Advisory Group.
 +
*Huff and Angels, 1992. Bulletin 71. Midwest Climate Center.
 +
*Illinois Conservation Foundation and Chicago Wilderness, 2005. [https://owl.cwp.org/mdocs-posts/cri-2005-changing-cost-perceptions-full-report/ Changing Cost Perceptions: An Analysis of Conservation Development]. Prepared by the Conservation Research Institute
 +
*Institute of Transportation Engineers Transportation Planning Council Committee
 +
*Isabelle, P.S., L.J. Fooks, P.A. Kenny and S.D. Wilson, 1987. Effects of roadside snowmelt on wetland vegetation: An experimental study. Jour. of Envir. Management, 25:57-60.
 +
*Jeffries, D.S., 1988. Snowpack release of pollutants. National Water Research Institute (Burlington, Ontario, Canada), Report No. 88-06.
 +
*Johnson, K. 1995. Urban Storm Water Impacts on a Coldwater Resource. Presentation to the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) Second World Congress. Vancouver, B.C., Canada.
 +
*Jones, J., S. Anderson, J. Fognani, F. R. MacGregor, and T. Axley. 1996. “Stormwater Best Management Practices: When is Sediment Considered Hazardous?” Water Environment & Technology.
 +
*Laughland, J. C. Stormwater Management Design in Karst Terrain: Adjusting Hydrology Models and Using Karstic Features.
 +
*Leersnyder, H. 1993. The Performance of Wet Detention Basins for the Removal of Urban Stormwater Contaminants in the Aukland (NZ) Region. M.S. Thesis. Department of Environmental Science and Geography. University of Auckland. 118 pp.
 +
*Leopold, L. B. 1994. A View of a River. Harvard University Press. Cambridge, MA.
 +
*Leopold, L., M. Wolman, and J. Miller. 1964. Fluvial Processes in Geomorphology. W.H. Freeman and Company. San Francisco, CA.
 +
*Liptan, T. and C. Brown. 1996. A Cost Comparison of Conventional and Water Quality-based Stormwater Designs. City of Portland. Portland OR.
 +
*MacRae, C. 1993. An alternate design approach for the control of instream erosion potential in urbanizing watersheds. pp. 1086-1091. In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Urban Storm Drainage. Niagra Falls, Ontario. Marsalek and Torno (eds.).
 +
*MacRae, C. 1996. Experience from morphological research on Canadian streams: is control of the two-year frequency runoff event the best basis for stream channel protection? In Effects of Watershed Development and Management on Aquatic Systems . L. Roesner (ed.) Engineering Foundation Conference. Proceedings. Snowbird, UT. August 4-9, 1996. pp. 144-160.
 +
*MacRae C. and A. Rowney. 1992. The role of moderate flow events and bank structure in the determination of channel response to urbanization. 45th Annual Conference. Resolving Conflicts and Uncertainty in Water Management. Proceeding of the Canadian Water Resources Association. June 1992. Kingston, Ontario.
 +
*MacRae, C. and M. DeAndrea. 1999. Assessing the Impact of Urbanization on Channel Morphology. Second International Conference on Natural Channel Systems. Niagara Falls, OT.
 +
*Marsalek, J., 2003. Road salts in urban stormwater: An emerging issue in stormwater management in cold climate. In Proceedings - Urban Drainage and Highway Runoff in Cold Climate, March 25-27, 2003, Riksgränsen, Sweden, pp.65-74.
 +
*Marsalek, J., G.L. Oberts, K. Exall and M. Viklander, 2003. Review of the operation of urban drainage systems in cold weather: Water quality considerations. In Proceedings – Urban Drainage and Highway Runoff in Cold Climate, March 25-27, 2003, Riksgränsen, Sweden, pp.1-11.
 +
*Marsalek, P.M., W.E. Watt, J. Marsalek, and B.C. Anderson, 2000. Winter flow dynamics on an on-stream stormwater management pond. Water Qual. Res. Jour. Canada,35(3): 505-523.
 +
*Marsh, P. and M-K. Woo, 1984. Wetting front advance and freezing of meltwater within a snow cover - 1. Observations in the Canadian Arctic. Water Res. Research, 20(12): 1853- 1864.
 +
*Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE). 2000. 2000 Maryland Stormwater Design Manual. MDE. Baltimore, MD.
 +
*Matheussen, B.V. and S.T. Thorolfsson, 2003. Estimation of snow-covered areafor an urban catchment using image processing and neural networks. In Proceedings - Urban Drainage and Highway Runoff in Cold Climate, March 25-27, 2003, Riksgränsen, Sweden, pp.315-326.
 +
*Maurer, G. 1996. A Better Way to Grow: For More Livable Communities and a Healthier Chesapeake Bay. Chesapeake Bay Foundation. Annapolis, MD.
 +
*McCuen, R. 1979. Downstream effects of stormwater management basins. Journal of the Hydraulics Division, ASCE, Vol. 105, No. HY11.
 +
*McCuen R. and G. Moglen. 1988. Multicriterion stormwater management methods. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management. (114) 4.
 +
*McDonald, F. 1999. Ecologically Sound Lawn Care for the Pacific Northwest: Findings from the Scientific Literature and Recommendations from Turf Professionals. City of Seattle Public Works. Seattle, WA.
 +
*Messer, D.F., 2003. Mosquitoes in Structural Stormwater BMPs: A Case Study. In Proceedings of the StormCon Conference of 2003, San Antonio, Texas. Published by Forester Communications, Santa Barbara, CA.
 +
*Metropolitan Council, 1995. Precipitation Frequency Analysis.
 +
*Metropolitan Council (MC). 2001. Minnesota Urban Small Sites BMP Manual: Stormwater best management practices for cold climates. Metropolitan Council Environmental Services. St. Paul. MN.
 +
*Metzger, M.E., 2003. Mosquito Control Challenges Presented by Stormwater Treatment Devices in the United States. In Proceedings of the StormCon Conference of 2003, San Antonio, Texas. Published by Forester Communications, Santa Barbara, CA.
 +
*Metzger, M.E., D.F. Messner, C.L. Beitia, C.M. Meyers, and V.L. Kramer, 2002. The Dark Side of Stormwater Runoff Management: Disease Vectors Associated with Structural BMPs. Stormwater, 3(2):24-39.
 +
*Minnehaha Creek Watershed District (MCWD), 2001. Benefits of Wetland Buffers: A Study of Functions, Values, and Size. Prepared for MCWD by EOR. Oakdale, MN. 41pp.
 +
*Minnehaha Creek Watershed District, 2003. Hydrologic, Hydraulic, and Pollutant Loading Study.
 +
*Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 2000. [http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/forestry/urban/bmps.html Conserving Wooded Areas in Developing Communities]; Best Management Practices in Minnesota.
 +
*Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2003. Field Guide to the Native Plant Communities of Minnesota: The Laurentian Mixed Forest Province. Ecological Land Clasificaiton Program, Minnesota County Biological Survey, and Natural Heritage and Nongame Research Program, MNDNR St. Paul, MN.
 +
*Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2005. Field Guide to the Native Plant Communities of Minnesota: The Eastern Broadleaf Forest Province. Ecological Land Clasificaiton Program, Minnesota County Biological Survey, and Natural Heritage and Nongame Research Program, MNDNR St. Paul, MN.
 +
*Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2006. Field Guide to the Native Plant Communities of Minnesota: The Prairie Parkland and Tallgrass Aspen Parklands Province. Ecological Land Clasificaiton Program, Minnesota County Biological Surve, and Natural Heritage and Nongame Research Program, MNDNR St. Paul, MN.
 +
*Minnesota Department of Transportation, 1998. Intensity of Extreme Rainfall over Minnesota.
 +
*Minnesota Department of Transportation. 2005. Highway 23 Reconstrustion Website.
 +
*Minnesota Department of Transportation, 2005. [http://www.lrrb.org/pdf/200523.pdf The Cost and Effectiveness of Stormwater Management Practices]. Report 2005-23, St. Paul, MN.
 +
*Minnesota Forest Resources Council. 1999. Sustaining Minnesota Resources: Voluntary Site-Level forest Management Guidelines for Landowners, Loggers, and Resource Managers. (General Guidelines pp. 22-23). Minnesota Forest Resources Council, St. Paul, MN.
 +
*Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, March, 2000. Protecting Water Quality in Urban Areas. Best Management Practices for Dealing with Storm Water Runoff from Urban, Suburban and Developing Areas of Minnesota. St. Paul, Minnesota.
 +
*Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA). 2002. Protecting Water Quality In Urban Areas. St Paul, MN.
 +
*Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA). 2004. [http://www.pca.state.mn.us/water/tmdl/index.html 2004 Final List of Impaired Waters].
 +
*Minnesota State Climatology Office and Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2003. Normal Annual Precipitation.
 +
*Morisawa, M and E. La Flure. 1979. Hydraulic geometry, stream equalization and urbanization. In the Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Geomorphology Symposia Series entitled “Adjustments of the Fluvial System” held in Binghampton, NY. September 21-22, 1979. Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, Dubuque, IA.
 +
*Natural Resources Conservation Service. 1975. [https://semspub.epa.gov/work/05/208889.pdf Minnesota Hydrology Guide].
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*Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), 1984. Engineering Field Manual for Conservation Practices. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C.
 +
*Natural Resources Conservation Service, 1986. [https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb1044171.pdf Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds], Technical Release 55 (TR-55).
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*National Resource Conservation Service, 1997. [https://directives.sc.egov.usda.gov/viewerfs.aspx?hid=21422 National Engineering Handbook, Part 630, Hydrology]. NRCS National Water and Climate Center.
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*Natural Resource Conservation Service. 2005. Status of Soil Survey Digitizing (SSURGO) Minnesota.
 +
*Novotny, V., 1988. Modeling Urban Runoff Pollution during Winter and Off-Winter Periods. In Advances in Environmental Modeling, A. Marani (Editor), Elsevier Publishing, Amsterdam, pp.43-58.
 +
*Novotny, V., D.W. Smith, D.A. Kuemmel, J. Mastriano and A. Bartošová, 1999. Urban and Highway Snowmelt: Minimizing the Impact on Receiving Water. Water Environment Research Foundation (WERF), Project 94-IRM-2.
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*Oberts, G.L., 2003. Cold climate BMPs: Solving the Management Puzzle. In Proceedings - Urban Drainage and Highway Runoff in Cold Climate, March 25-27, 2003, Riksgränsen, Sweden, pp.13-31.
 +
*Oberts, G., and R. Osgood. 1988. final Report on the Function of the Wetland Treatment Systems and the Impacts on Lake McCarrons. Metropolitan Council. Publ. No. 590-89-062(a).
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*Oberts, G.L., P.J. Wotzka and J.A. Hartsoe, 1989. The Water Quality Performance of Select Urban Runoff Treatment Systems, Metropolitan Council, Publication No. 590-89-062a, 170 p.
 +
*Pitt, R., 1989. Small Storm Hydrology: The integration of flow and water quality for management practices University of Alabama-Birmingham.
 +
*Pitt, R., 1989. Source Load Assessment and Management Model (SLAMM).
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*Pitt, R. 2001. Methods for Detection of Inappropriate Discharges to Storm Drainage Systems: Background Literature and Summary of Findings. Tuscaloosa, AL.
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*Pitt, R., 2004. National Stormwater Quality Database.
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*Polta, R., 2004. A Survey of Regulations Used to Control the Use and Disposal of Stormwater Pond Sediments in the United States and Canada. EQA Report 04-542, Metropolitan Council Environmental Services, St. Paul, MN.
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*Pitt, R., A. Maestre, and R. Morquecho, 2004. The National Stormwater Quality Database (NSQD, Version 1.1). Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.
 +
*Prince George’s County Maryland. 2002. Prince George’s County Bioretention Manual. Department of Environmental Resources.
 +
*Pronold, M., 2000. Administering the NPDES Industrial Storm Water Program in Proceedings: National Conference on Tools for Urban Water Resource Management and Protection. U.S. EPA, Office of Research and Development, EPA/625-R-00-001.
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*Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District. 2001. Tanners Lake Water Quality Improvement Project. Project Report.
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*Rawls, W., D. Brakensiek, and N. Miller, 1983. Green-Ampt infiltration parameters from soils data. Journal of Hydraulic Engineering. Vol. 109, No. 1, pp. 62 – 70.
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*Rawls, W., D. Brakensiek, and K. Saxton, 1982. Estimation of Soil Water Properties. Transactions of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers. Vol. 25, No. 5, pp. 1316 – 1320 and 1328.
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*Rawls, W., D. Giminez, and R. Grossman, 1998. Use of Soil Texture, Bulk Density and Slope of water Retention Curve to Predict Saturated Hydraulic Conductivity. ASAE. Vol. 41(2), pp. 983 – 988.
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*Roa-Espinosa, A., T. Wilson, J. Norman, and K. Johnson. 2003. Predicting the Impact of Urban Development of Stream Temperature using a Thermal Urban Runoff Model (TURM). National Conference on Urban Storm Water: Enhancing Programs at the Local Level. Proceedings. Chicago, IL.
 +
*Sansalone, J.J. and S.G. Buchberger, 1996. Characterization of metals and solids in urban highway winter snow and spring rainfall-runoff. Trans. Res. Record, 1523:147-159.
 +
*Schiffer, D. 1989. Effects of Highway Runoff on the Quality of Water and Bed Sediments in Two Wetlands in Central Florida. U.S. Geological Survey Publication No. 88-4200. Florida Department of Transportation.
 +
*Schueler, T. 1987. Controlling urban runoff: a practical manual for planning and designing urban best management practices. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. Washington, D.C.
 +
*Schueler, T. 1992. Design of Stormwater Wetland Systems. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. Washington, D.C.
 +
*Schueler, T. 1994. Design of Stormwater Pond Systems. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Schueler, T. 1994. Hydrocarbon Hotspots: Can They Be Controlled? Watershed Protection Techniques. (1)1:3-5.
 +
*Schueler, T., 2000. Pollutant Dynamics of Pond Muck. Watershed Protection Techniques, 1(2): 39-46. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Schueler, T. and D. Shepp. 1993. The Quality of Trapped Sediments ad Pool Water within Oil Grit Separators in Maryland. MWCOG. Maryland Department of Environment. 42 pp.
 +
*Schueler, T. 1995. Site Planning for Urban Stream Protection. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD
 +
*Schueler, T. and K. Brown. 2004. Manual 4: Urban Stream Repair Practices. Urban Subwatershed Restoration Manual Series. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Schueler, T., C. Swann, T. Wright, and S. Sprinkle. 2004. Urban Subwatershed Restoration Manual No. 8: Pollution Source Control Practices, Version 1.0. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Shaver, E. 1991. Sand Filter Design for Water Quality Treatment.
 +
*Shaw, D. and R. Schmidt, 2003. [https://www.pca.state.mn.us/water/plants-stormwater-design Plants for Stormwater Design]. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, 369 p.
 +
*Soil Conservation Service, 1975. Hydrology Guide for Minnesota.
 +
*South St. Louis Soil and Water Conservation District. 2001. Miller Creek Diagnostic Study and Implementation Plan: Clean Water Partnership Phase I Report
 +
*Stanek, S. (no date). West Nile Virus and Stormwater Management. Brochure prepared for the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District, Deephaven, MN.
 +
*State of Maryland. 2000. Maryland Stormwater Design Manual. Volume I and II. Maryland Department of Environment. Baltimore, MD.
 +
*State of Minnesota Storm-Water Advisory Group. 1997. Storm-Water and Wetlands: Planning and Evaluation guidelines for Addressing Potential Impacts of Urban Storm-Water and Snow-Melt Runoff on Wetlands. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. St. Paul, MN.
 +
*State of New Jersey. 2004. [http://www.njstormwater.org New Jersey Stormwater Best Management Practices Manual]. Watershed Management Division. Department of Environmental Protection. Trenton, NJ
 +
*State of New York. 2003. Stormwater Management Design Manual. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Albany, NY.
 +
*State of Pennsylvania. 2005. Pennsylvania Stormwater Best Management Practices Manual. Bureau of Stormwater Management Department of Environmental Protection. Harrisburg, PA
 +
*State of Vermont, 2002. The Vermont Stormwater Management Manual-Final Draft. Vermont Agency of Natural Resources, Waterbury, VT. UNESCO, 2000. Urban Drainage in Specific Climates: Vol.II. Urban Drainage in Cold Climates. ed. by S. Saegrov, J. Milina and S.T. Thorolfsson. IHP-V, Technical Documents in Hydrology, No. 40, Vol. II, Paris.
 +
*State of Washington. 2004. Stormwater Management Manual For Water Quality in Western Washington, Volume III. Hydrologic Analysis and Flow Control Procedures. Washington Department of Ecology, Olympia, WA.
 +
*State of Wisconsin. 2000. Wisconsin storm water manual; technical design guidelines for storm water management practices. University of Wisconsin-Extension. Madison, WI .
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*State of Wisconsin. 2004. NR-151: Runoff management: Non-agricultural Performance Standards. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. July, 2004. No. 583.
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*St. Johns River Management District (SJRMD). 2001. Applicant’s Handbook: Regulation of Stormwater Management Systems. Palatka, FL.Semadeni-Davies, A., 2003. Response surfaces for climate change impact assessments in urban areas. In Proceedings – Urban Drainage and Highway Runoff in Cold Climate, March 25-27, 2003, Riksgränsen, Sweden, pp.269-279.
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*Stenlund, D. 2005. Meeting Stormwater Discharge Requirements Using Compost Along Silver Cliff Creek Trail, SWPPP Development and Implementation with Compost as a Primary Best Management Practice. Powerpoint Presentation Presented at the 2005 Minnesota Air, Water, and Waste Conference, February 12, 2005.
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*USDA. 1986. TR-55 Urban Hydrology for Small Watersheds.
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*U.S. EPA (no date). Wetlands and West Nile Virus brochure. United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA). 1980. Our Nation’s Lakes. Office of Water. Washington, D.C. EPA-440-5-80-009.
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*U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA). 1993. Natural Wetlands and Urban Storm water: Potential Impacts and Management.
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*U.S. Environemental Protection Agency, 1997. Compendium of Tools for Watershed Assessment and TMDL Development. EPA 841-B-97-006, Office of Water (4503F), Washington, D.C.
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*U.S. Weather Bureau (D.M. Hershfield), 1961. Rainfall Frequency Atlas of the United States for Durations from 30 Minutes to 24 Hours and Return Periods from 1 to 100 Years. USWB Technical Publication 40 (TP 40).
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*Walker, W. W., 1987. Design Calculations for Wet Detention Ponds. Prepared for the St. Paul Water Utility and Vadnais Lake Area Water Management Organization, St. Paul, Minn.
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*Walker Jr., W. W., 2000. [http://wwwalker.net/p8/ P8 Urban Catchment Modal] (Version 2.4), IEP, Inc. and Narrangansett Bay Project USEPA/RIDEM.
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*Washington County Water Consortium (WCWC). 2003. Comparative review of watershed district rules and recommendations for standardization. Washington County Office of Administration
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*Wass, R.D., 2003. Mosquito Management Do’s and Don’ts in an Engineered Arizona Treatment Wetland System. In Proceedings of the StormCon Conference of 2003, San Antonio, Texas. Published by Forester Communications, Santa Barbara, CA.
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*Weiss, P.T., Gulliver, J.S., Erickson, A.J., 2005. The Cost and Effectiveness of Stormwater Management Practices. Prepared for the University of Minnesota.
 +
*Westerström, G., 1984. Snowmelt runoff from Porsön residential area, Luleå, Sweden.In Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Urban Storm Drainage, Gothenburg, Sweden, June 4-8, 1984, pp. 315-324.
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*Wheaton, S.R. and W.J. Rice, 2003. Siting, design and operational controls for snow disposal sites. In Proceedings - Urban Drainage and Highway Runoff in Cold Climate, March 25-27, 2003, Riksgränsen, Sweden, pp.85-95.
 +
*Wigington, P., C. Randall, And T. Grizzard. 1986. Accumulation of Selected Trace Metals in Soils of Urban Runoff Swale Drains. Water Resources Bulletin. 22(1): 73-79.
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*Willott, E. 2004. “Restoring nature, without mosquitoes?” Restoration Ecology 12(2): 147-153. [http://research.biology.arizona.edu/mosquito/Willott/Pubs/Restore.html]
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*Winer, R. 2000. National Pollutant Removal Performance Database for Stormwater Treatment Practices. 2nd Edition. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
 +
*Winer, R. and J. Zielinski. 2003. Critical Area 10% Rule Guidance Manual: Maryland Chesapeake and Atlantic Coastal Bays. Center for Watershed Protection. Critical Area Commission, Annapolis, MD.
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*Wright, T., C. Swann, K. Cappiella, and T. Schueler. 2004. Urban Subwatershed Restoration Manual No. 11: Unified Subwatershed and Site Reconnaissance: A User’s Manual, Version 1.0. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
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*Yousef, Y., M. Wanielista, J. Dietz, L. Yin, and M. Brabham. 1990. Final Report-Efficiency Optimization of Wet Detention Ponds for Urban Stormwater Management. University of Central Florida. Florida Department of Environmental Regulation. 200 pp.
 +
*Yousef, Y., L. Lin, J. Sloat, and K. Kaye. 1991. Maintenance Guidelines for Accumulated Sediments in Retention/Detention Ponds Receiving Highway Runoff. University of Central Florida. Florida Department of Transportation. 210 pp.
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*Zielinski, J., 2001. The Benefits of Better Site Design in Residential Subdivisions. Watershed Protection
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 +
[[Category:Level 2 - General information, reference, tables, images, and archives/Reference]]

Revision as of 23:04, 21 July 2022

References for bioretention

References for dry swale (grass swale)

  • Brown, R.A. and Hunt, W.F. 2010. Impacts of construction activity on bioretention performance. Journal of Hydrologic Engineering. 15(6):386-394.
  • Erickson, A.J., P.T. Weiss, and J.S. Gulliver. 2013. Optimizing Stormwater Treatment Practices: A Handbook of Assessment and Maintenance. Springer Publishing, New York, NY, USA.
  • Gulliver, J.S., A.J. Erickson, and P.T. Weiss (editors). 2010. Stormwater Treatment: Assessment and Maintenance. University of Minnesota, St. Anthony Falls Laboratory. Minneapolis, MN.
  • Hatt, B.E., Steinel, A., Deletic, A., and Fletcher, T.D. 2011. Retention of heavy metals by stormwater filtration systems: Breakthrough analysis. Water, Science, and Technology. 64(9):1913-1919.
  • Hunt, W.F., Jarrett, A.R., Smith, J.T., and Sharkey, L.J. 2006. Evaluating bioretention hydrology and nutrient removal at three field sites in North Carolina. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering. 132(6):600-608.
  • Lefevre, G.H., P.J. Novak, R.M. Hozalski. 2012. Fate of naphthalene in laboratory-scale bioretention cells: implications for sustainable stormwater management. Environmental Science and Technology 46(2):995-1002.
  • Li, H. and Davis, A.P. 2008. Heavy metal capture and accumulation in bioretention media. Environmental Science & Technology. 42:5247-5253.
  • Morgan, J.G., K.A. Paus, R.M. Hozalski and J.S. Gulliver. 2011. Sorption and Release of Dissolved Pollutants Via Bioretention Media. SAFL Project Report No. 559. September 2011.
  • North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources. 2009. NCDENR Stormwater BMP Manual – Section 14, Grassed Swale.
  • O’Neill, S.W. and Davis, A.P. 2012. Water treatment residual as a bioretention amendment for phosphorus. I: Evaluation studies. Journal of Environmental Engineering. 138(3), 318-327.
  • Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (VA DCR). 2011. Virginia DCR Stormwater Design Specification No. 3 – Grass Channels. Version 1.8, March 1, 2011. Division of Soil and Water Conservation. Richmond, VA.
  • Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (VA DCR). 2011. Virginia DCR Stormwater Design Specification No. 10 – Dry Swales. Version 1.9, March 1, 2011. Division of Soil and Water Conservation. Richmond, VA.

References for green roofs

  • ASTM. 2005. Method E2399-5, Standard Test Method for Maximum Media Density for Dead Load Analysis of Green Roof Systems. ASTM International, West Conshohocken, PA.
  • Bengtsson, L., L. Grahn, and J. Olsson. 2005. Hydrological function of a thin extensive green roof in southern Sweden. Nordic Hydrol. 36 (3), 259–268.
  • Berghage, R. Penn State Center for Green Roof Research. Green Roof Media Nutrient Testing, Nutrient Management, and Runoff Water Quality. Presentation to NASA Workshop.
  • Berghage, R.D., D.Beattie, A. R. Jarrett, C. Thuring, F. Razaei, and T. P. O’Connor. 2009. Green Roofs for Stormwater Runoff Control. National Risk Management Research Laboratory Office Of Research And Development U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Cincinnati, OH 45268. EPA/600/R-09/026.
  • Berghage, R. D., and A. R. Jarrett. 2007. Quantifying Evaporation and Transpirational Water Losses from Green Roofs and Green Roof Media Capacity for Neutralizing Acid Rain. National Decentralized Water Resources Capacity Development Project, Penn State University.
  • Berghage, R., C. Miller, B. Bass, D. Moseley, and K. Weeks. 2010. Stormwater Runoff from a Large Commercial Roof in Chicago. Proceedings Cities Alive Conference. Vancouver, Canada. Nov 30-Dec 3.
  • Berndtsson, J. C. 2010. Green roof performance towards management of runoff water quantity and quality: A review. Ecological Engineering, 36, 351-360.
  • Butler, C., and C.M. Orians. 2011. Sedum cools soil and can improve neighboring plant performance during water deficit on a green roof. Ecological Engineering,37(11): 1796–1803.
  • Cantor, S. L. 2008. Green Roofs in Sustainable Landscape Design. W.W.Norton, NY.
  • Carpenter, D.D., Kaluvakolanu, P. 2011. Effect of roof surface type on stormwater run-off from full-scale roofs in a temperate climate. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering 137:161-169.
  • Carter, Timothy, and Andrew Keeler. 2008. Life-Cycle cost–benefit Analysis of Extensive Vegetated Roof Systems. Journal of environmental management 87:350-363.
  • Carter, T., Rasmussen, T. 2006. Hydrological behavior of vegetated roofs. Journal of the American Water Resources Association 42, 1261-1274.
  • Compton, J. S., and T. H. Whitlow. 2006. A Zero Discharge Green Roof System and Species Selection to Optimize Evapotranspiration and Water Retention. Greening Rooftops for Sustainable Communities, Boston, MA, May 11-12, 2006.
  • David Evans and Associates, Inc. and ECONorthwest. 2008. Cost Benefit Evaluation Of Ecoroofs. Prepared for: City of Portland Bureau of Environmental Services Sustainable Stormwater Group.
  • Durhman, A.K. D. B. Rowe, and C. L. Rugh. 2007. Effect of Substrate Depth on Initial Growth, Coverage, and Survival of 25 Succulent Green Roof Plant Taxa. HORTSCIENCE 42(3):588–595. 2007.
  • Durhman, A.K., D.B. Rowe, and C.L. Rugh. 2006. Effect of watering regimen on chlorophyll fluorescence and growth of selected green roof plant taxa. HortScience 41:1623–1628.
  • Dvorak, B, and K. Carroll. 2008. Chicago City Hall Green Roof: Its Evolving Form and Care. Greening Rooftops for Sustainable Communities Conference Proceedings, Baltimore, MD.
  • Dvorak, B., and A. Volder. 2010. Green Roof Vegetation for North American Ecoregions: A Literature Review. Landscape and Urban Planning 96: 197-213.
  • Fassman, E. and Simcock, R. 2012. Moisture Measurements as Performance Criteria for Extensive Living Roof Substrates. J. Environ. Eng., 138(8), 841–851. doi: 10.1061/(ASCE)EE.1943-7870.0000532
  • Forschungsgesellschaft Landschaftsentwicklung Landschaftsbau e.V. (FLL) Richlinien für die Planung, Ausführung and Plege von Dachbegrünung (Guideline for the Planning, Execution and Upkeep of Green-Roof Sites: developed by the German Research Society for Landscape Development and Landscape Design)
  • Getter, K.L.; Rowe, D.B. 2008. Selecting Plants for Extensive Green Roofs in the United States. Michigan State University Extension Bulletin E-3047.
  • Getter, K.L., Rowe, D.B., Andresen, J.A., 2007. Quantifying the effect of slope on extensive green roof stormwater retention. Ecological Engineering, 31, 225-231.
  • Green Roofs for Healthy Cities and The Cardinal Group. 2006. Green Roof Design 101: Introductory Course. Second Edition Participant’s Manual.
  • Green Roofs for Healthy Cities. No publication year given. Green Roof Infrastructure: Design and Installation 201.
  • Green Roofs for Healthy Cities (GRHC). 2005. Green Roof Design 101 Introductory Course Participant Manual. Green Roofs for Healthy Cities and the Cardinal Group Inc.
  • Lundholm J, J.S. MacIvor, Z. MacDougall, and M. Ranalli. 2010. Plant Species and Functional Group Combinations Affect Green Roof Ecosystem Functions. PLoS ONE 5(3): e9677. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0009677.
  • Magnuson Klemenic Associates. 2007. Technical Memorandum: Stormwater Control Potential for Seattle Green Roof Retrofits. Seattle Public Utilities Green Roof Retrofit Study.
  • Mandel, L.. 2013. EAT UP; The Inside Scoop on Rooftop Agriculture. New Society Publishers: Gabriola Island, BC, Canada.
  • Mentens, J., Raes, D. & Hermy, M. 2006. Green roofs as a tool for solving the rainwater runoff problem in the urbanized 21st century? Landscape and Urban Planning, 77, 217-226.
  • Miller, C. 2003. Moisture management in green roofs. In: Proc. of 1st North American Green Roof Conference: Greening Rooftops for Sustainable Communities. The Cardinal Group. Toronto, Chicago, IL, 29–30 May 2003. p. 177–182.
  • Miller, C., K. Weeks, B. Bass, R. Berghage, and S. Berg. 2010. Stormwater Policy As A Green Roof (Dis)Incentive For Retail Developers. Cities Alive 8th Annual Green roof &Wall Conference, Vancouver, November 30-December 03, 2010.
  • Monterusso, M.A., D.B. Rowe, and C.L. Rugh. 2005. Establishment and persistence of Sedum spp. and native taxa for green roof applications. HortScience 40:391–396.
  • Moran, A., B. Hunt, and J. Smith. 2005. Hydrologic and water quality performance from green roofs in Goldsboro and Raleigh, North Carolina, p. 512-525. In Proc. of 3rd North American Green Roof Conference: Greening rooftops for Sustainable Communities. Washington, DC. 4-6 May 2005. The Cardinal Group, Toronto.
  • National Institute of Building Sciences. Whole Building Design Guide.
  • Peck, S.W. and M.E. Kuhn, 2002. Design Guidelines for Green Roofs. Report prepared for the Ontario Association of Architects and the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, Toronto, Ontario.
  • Porsche, U. and M. Kohler. 2003. Life Cycle Costs of Green Roofs: A Comparison of Germany, USA, and Brazil. Presented at the World Climate and Energy Event. December 1-5, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
  • Rezaei, F., A.R. Jarrett, R.D. Berghage, and D.J. Beattie. 2005. Evapotranspiration Rates from Extensive Green Roof Plant Species. ASAE Meeting Presentation Paper Number 052150. Written for presentation at the 2005 ASAE Annual International Meeting Sponsored by ASAE, Tampa Convention Center. Tampa, FL 17-20 July 2005.
  • Rowe, B.D. 2011. Green roofs as a means of pollution abatement. Environmental Pollution 159: 2100-2110.
  • Rowe, D.B., C.L. Rugh, N. VanWoert, M.A. Monterusso, and D.K. Russell. 2003. Green roof slope, substrate depth, and begetation influence runoff. p. 354-362 In Proc. Of 1st North American Green Roof Conferences: Greening rooftops for Sustainable Communities, Chicago. 29-30 May 2003. The Cardinal Group, Toronto.
  • Rowe, D. Bradley, Kristin L. Getter, and Angela K. Durhman. 2012. Effect of green roof media depth on Crassulacean plant succession over seven years. Landscape and Urban Planning (Elsevier) 104: 310-319.
  • Rowe, D.B., C.L. Rugh, and A.K. Durhman. 2006. Assessment of substrate depth and composition on green roof plant performance. Proc. of 4th North American Green Roof Conference: Greening Rooftops for Sustainable Communities. Boston, Mass. 10–12 May 2006. The Cardinal Group, Toronto.
  • Saiz, S., et al. 2006. Comparative Life Cycle Assessment of Standard and Green Roofs. Environmental Science and Technology 40: 4312-4316.
  • Simmons, M.T., B. Gardiner, S. Windhager, and J. Tinsley. 2008. Green roofs are not created equal: the hydrologic and thermal performance of six different extensive green roofs and reflective and non-reflective roofs in a sub-tropical climate. Urban Ecosyst. 11, 339–348.
  • Sinclair, T.R.; N.M. Holbrook, and M.A. Zwieniecki. 2005. Daily Transpiration Rates of Woody Species on Drying Soil. Tree Physiology 25: 1469-1472. Victoria Canada.
  • Snodgrass, E.C. and L.L. Snodgrass. 2006. Green Roof Plants: A Resource and Planting Guide. Timber Press. Portland, OR.
  • Sutton, R.K.; J.A. Harrington; L. Skabelund; P. MacDonagh; R. R. Coffman; and G. Koch. 2012. Prairie-Based Green Roofs: Literature, Templates, and Analogs. Journal of Green Building 7(1):143-172.
  • Sutton, R.; B. Rowe;G. Acomb; J. Lambrinos; P. MacDonagh; R. Hawke. 2012. New Plant Performance for 21st Century Green Roof Ecosystems. Cities Alive Conference, Chicago IL.
  • Taylor, B. L. and D. Gangnes. 2007. Technical Memorandum: Stormwater Control Potential for Seattle Green Roof Retrofits. Seattle Public Utilities Green Roof Retrofit Study.
  • Teemusk, A., and U. Mander. 2007. “Rainwater runoff quantity and quality performance from a greenroof: The effects of short-term events.” Ecol. Eng., 30(3), 271–277.
  • Toronto and Region Conservation. An Economic Analysis of Green Roofs: Evaluating the Costs and Savings to Building Owners in Toronto and Surrounding Regions. Sustainable Technologies Evaluation Program. July.
  • Torrance, S.; B. Bass, S. MacIvor and T. McGlade in conjunction with Toronto City Planning Division. No publication year given. City of Toronto Guidelines for Biodiverse Green Roofs].
  • Ulrich, R.S. 2002. Health Benefits of Gardens in Hospitals. Paper for Conference, Plants for People, International Exhibition Floriade.
  • Van Seters, T., L. Rocha, and G. MacMillan, G. Evaluation of the runoff quantity and quality performance of an extensive green roof in Toronto, Ontario. Proceedings of the Greening Rooftops for Sustainable Communities, Minneapolis, 2007.
  • VanWoert, N.D., D.B. Rowe, J.A. Andresen, C.L. Rugh, and L. Xiao. 2005. Watering regime and green roof substrate design affect Sedum plant growth. HortScience 40:659–664.
  • Villarreal, E. L. and L. Bengtsson (2005). Response of a sedum green-roof to individual rain events. Ecological Engineering 25(1): 1-7.
  • Voyde, E., E. Fassman, R. Simcock, and J. Wells. 2010. ”Quantifying Evapotranspiration Rates for New Zealand Green Roofs.” J. Hydrol. Eng. 15, SPECIAL ISSUE: Low Impact Development, Sustainability Science, and Hydrological Cycle, 395–403.
  • Whittinghill, L.J. and D.B. Rowe. 2012. The role of green roof technology in urban agriculture. Renewable Agriculture and Food Systems 27(4):314-322.
  • Whittinghill, L.J., D.B. Rowe, and B.M. Cregg. 2013. Evaluation of vegetable production on extensive green roofs. Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems 37(4):465-484.
  • Whittinghill, L.J.; D.B. Rowe, 2011. Salt tolerance of common green roof and green wall plants. Urban Ecosystems 14(4):783-794.

References for high-gradient stormwater step-pool swale

  • Anne Arundel County. 2009. Design Guidelines for Step Pool Storm Conveyance. Anne Arundel County Government. Department of Public Works. Bureau of Engineering.
  • Anne Arundel County. Step Pool Conveyance Systems (SPCS) Design Calculator.
  • Brown, R.A. and Hunt, W.F. 2010. Impacts of construction activity on bioretention performance. Journal of Hydrologic Engineering. 15(6), 386-394.
  • Gulliver, J.S., A.J. Erickson, and P.T. Weiss (editors). 2010. Stormwater Treatment: Assessment and Maintenance. University of Minnesota, St. Anthony Falls Laboratory. Minneapolis, MN.
  • Hatt, B.E., Steinel, A., Deletic, A., and Fletcher, T.D. 2011. Retention of heavy metals by stormwater filtration systems: Breakthrough analysis. Water, Science, and Technology. 64(9), 1913-1919.
  • Hunt, W.F., Jarrett, A.R., Smith, J.T., and Sharkey, L.J. 2006. Evaluating bioretention hydrology and nutrient removal at three field sites in North Carolina. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering. 132(6), 600-608.
  • Lefevre, G.H., P.J. Novak, R.M. Hozalski. 2012. Fate of naphthalene in laboratory-scale bioretention cells: implications for sustainable stormwater management. Environmental Science and Technology 46(2):995-1002.
  • Li, H. and Davis, A.P. 2008. Heavy metal capture and accumulation in bioretention media. Environmental Science & Technology. 42, 5247-5253.
  • Morgan, J.G., K.A. Paus, R.M. Hozalski and J.S. Gulliver. (2011). Sorption and Release of Dissolved Pollutants Via Bioretention Media. SAFL Project Report No. 559, September 2011.
  • North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources. 2009. NCDENR Stormwater BMP Manual – Section 14, Grassed Swale.
  • O’Neill, S.W. and Davis, A.P. (2012). Water treatment residual as a bioretention amendment for phosphorus. I: Evaluation studies. Journal of Environmental Engineering. 138(3), 318-327.
  • Rosgen, D.. 1996. Applied River Morphology. Wildland Hydrology.
  • Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (VA DCR). 2011. Virginia DCR Stormwater Design Specification No. 3 – Grass Channels. Version 1.8, March 1, 2011. Division of Soil and Water Conservation. Richmond, VA.
  • Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (VA DCR). 2011. Virginia DCR Stormwater Design Specification No. 10 – Dry Swales. Version 1.9, March 1, 2011. Division of Soil and Water Conservation. Richmond, VA.
  • West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection. 2012. West Virginia Stormwater Management and Design Guidance Manual. Section 4.2.7: Regenerative Stormwater Conveyance System (RSC). November 2012.

References for infiltration

References for iron enhanced sand filter

  • Banchand, P.A. M., and A. Heyvaert. 2005. Adsorptive Media Investigations and Testing for Improved Performance of Stormwater Treatment Systems in the Tahoe Basin. Prepared for Placer County Department of Public Works, Auburn, CA, and California Tahoe Conservancy, South Lake Tahoe, CA. Prepared by Bachand and Associates, and U.C. David Tahoe Research Group.
  • Barr Engineering Company. 2010. Iron-enhanced sand filter monitoring – 2010. December 28, 2010 Report to the Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District.
  • Center for Watershed Protection & Chesapeake Stormwater Network (CWP & CSN). 2008. Technical Memorandum: The Runoff Reduction Method. April 18, 2008
  • City of Bellevue Utilities Department and Shapiro and Associates. 1999. Lakemont storm water treatment facility monitoring program. Final Report. City of Bellevue Utilities Department. 301 116th Avenue SE. Bellevue, WA 98009-9012.
  • Claytor, R.A., and T.R. Schueler. 1996. Design of stormwater filtering systems. Prepared by The Center for Watershed Protection. 8391 Main Street, Ellicott City, MD 21043. Prepared for Chesapeake Research Consortium. (410) 461-8323.
  • Erickson, A.J., Gulliver, J.S., and P.T. Weiss. 2012. Capturing phosphates with iron enhanced sand filtration. Water Research. Vol. 26, pp. 3032-3042.
  • Erickson, A.J. and J.S Gulliver. 2010. Performance Assessment of an Iron-Enhanced Sand Filtration Trench for Capturing Dissolved Phosphorus. Project Report No. 549, St. Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Prepared for the City of Prior Lake, Minnesota
  • Erickson, A.J., Gulliver, J.S., and P.T. Weiss. 2007. Enhanced sand filtration for storm water phosphorus removal. Journal of Environmental Engineering. pp. 485-497. May 2007.
  • MNDOT 2005. MnDOT Standard Specifications Book, Division III – Materials, Minnesota Department of Transportation, St. Paul, Minnesota.
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA). 2008. Minnesota Stormwater Manual, Version 2.
  • Rawls, W. J., Gimenez, D., Grossman, R. 1998. Use of soil texture, bulk density, and slope of the water retention curve to predict saturated hydraulic conductivity. Transaction of the ASAE. Vol. 41(4): 983-988.

References for permeable pavement

References for pretreatment

  • Abu-Zreig, M., R. P. Rudra, H. R. Whiteley, M. N. Lalonde, and N. K. Kaushik. 2003. Phosphorus Removal in Vegetated Filter Strips. Journal of Environmental Quality, Vol. 32, No. 2, pp. 613–619.
  • Abu-Zreig, M., R. P. Rudra, M. N. Lalonde, H. R. Whiteley, and N. K. Kaushik. 2004. Experimental Investigation of Runoff Reduction and Sediment Removal by Vegetated Filter Strips. Hydrological Processes, Vol. 18, No. 11, pp. 2029–2037.
  • Barrett, M. E., P. M. Walsh, J. F. Malina, R. J. Charbeneau. 1998. Performance of Vegetative Controls for Treating Highway Runoff. Journal of Environmental Engineering, Vol. 124, No. 11, pp. 1121–1128.
  • Blanco-Canqui, H., C. J. Gantzer, S. H. Anderson, and E. E. Alberts. 2004. Grass Barriers for Reduced Concentrated Flow Induced Soil and Nutrient Loss. Soil Science, Vol. 68, pp. 1963-1972.
  • California Environmental Protection Agency. 2014. Draft Amendments to Statewide Water Quality Control Plans to Control Trash. Prepared by the California Environmental Protection Agency, Division of Water Quality, State Water Resources Control Board, Sacramento, CA.
  • California Department of Transportation. 2004. BMP Retrofit Pilot Program Final Report. CTSW-RT-01-050. Prepared by the California Department of Transportation CALTRANS, Division of Environmental Analysis, Sacramento, CA.
  • City of Madison. 2015. Leave the Leaf.
  • Coventry University. 1996. Laboratory Tests Conducted in the School of the Built Environment Coventry University, UK on X-CEPTOR CONCRETE BYPASS INTERCEPTOR Also Known As STORMCEPTOR in North America. Prepared by Coventry University. UK for CSR Humes (UK) Ltd. Pontyclun, Whales.
  • Contech Engineered Solutions. 2006. Vortechs® Technical Bulletin 5. Vortechs System Performance: Oil Removal Efficiency. Prepared by Contech Engineered Solutions, West Chester, OH.
  • Contech Engineered Solutions. 2006. Vortechs® Technical Bulletin 2. Particle Distribution of Sediments and the Effect on Heavy Metal Removal. Prepared by Contech Engineered Solutions, West Chester, OH.
  • Comprehensive Environmental Inc. and New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services. 2008. New Hampshire Stormwater Manual, Volume 2, Post-Construction Best Management Practices Selection & Design. Prepared by Comprehensive Environmental Inc. Merrimack, NH, and the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services, Concord, NH.
  • District Department of the Environment (DDOE). 2013. Stormwater Management Guidebook.
  • District Department of Environment. 2013. Anacostia River Watershed Trash TMDL Implementation Strategy. Prepared by the District Department of Environment. Stormwater Management Division.
  • Goel, P.K., R.P. Rudra, B. Gharabaghi, S. Das, and N. Gupta. 2004. Pollutants Removal by Vegetated Filter Strips Planted with Different Grasses. 2004 American Society of Association Executives/Canadian Society for Engineering in Agricultural, Food, and Biological Systems. Paper Number 042177. Fairmont Chateau Laurier. The Westin, Government Centre, Ottawa, ON, Canada. August 1–4.
  • Gharabaghi, B., R. P. Rudra, H. R. Whitely, and W. T. Dickinson. 2000. Sediment-Removal Efficiency of Vegetative Filter Strips. 2000 Annual Research Report. Prepared by the Guelph Turfgrass Institute, Guelph, ON, Canada.
  • Horsley Witten Group, University of New Hampshire Stormwater Center, and Loon Environmental. 2010. Rhode Island Stormwater Design and Installation Standards Manual. Prepared by Horsley Witten Group, Sandwich, MA; University of New Hampshire Stormwater Center, Durham, NH; and Loon Environmental, LLC, Riverside, RI; for the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, Providence, RI, and the Coastal Resources Management Council, Wakefield, RI.
  • Inver Grove Heights, 2006. Inver Grove Heights Stormwater Manual 2006. Prepared by Emmons & Olivier Resources, Inc. Oakdale, MN.
  • Kayhanian, M., Suverkropp, C., Ruby, A., and Tsay, K. 2007. Characterization and prediction of highway runoff constituent event mean concentration. J. Environ. Manage. 85, 279.
  • Maestre, A., and Pitt, R. 2005. The National Stormwater Quality Database, Version 1.1: A Compilation and Analysis of NPDES Stormwater Monitoring Information. University of Alabama. Center for Watershed Protection.
  • Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, 2008. Massachusetts Stormwater Handbook, Volume 2. Prepared by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, Boston, MA.
  • Maniquiz-Redillas, M. C., F. K. Geronimo, and L. H. Kim. 2014. Investigation on the Effectiveness of Pretreatment in Stormwater Management Technologies. Journal of Environmental Sciences, Vol. 26, No. 9, pp. 1824–1830.
  • New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. 2014. Chapter 9.10 Standard for Vegetative Filters. New Jersey Stormwater Best Management Practices Manual. Prepared by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Division of Watershed Management, Trenton, NJ.
  • New Jersey Corporation for Advanced Technology. 2015. NJCAT Technology Verification Program
  • Taylor, W. B., J. Marsalek, D. Doede, and C. He. 2003. Performance Evaluation of the EcoStorm Stormwater Treatment System as a Sediment Retention Device. Environment Canada, National Water Research Institute, Burlington/Saskatoon. AEM-TN03-005.
  • Taylor, G. D., T. D. Fletcher, T. H. Wong, P. F. Breen, and H. P. Duncan. 2005. Nitrogen Composition in Urban Runoff - Implications for Stormwater Management. Water Research, Vol. 39, No. 10, pp. 1982–1989.
  • Tahoe Regional Planning Agency. 2014. Best Management Practices Handbook. Prepared by the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, Stateline, NV.
  • United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). 2012. Los Angeles Area Lakes Total Maximum Daily Loads for Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Mercury, Trash, Organochlorine Pesticides and PCBs.
  • United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). 2014. Trash and Debris Management.
  • Virginia Department of Ecology. 1999. Virginia Stormwater Management Handbook, First Edition. Volumes 1 and 2. Prepared by the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, Division of Soil and Water Conservation, Richmond, VA.
  • Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. 2011. Appendix D: Sediment Forebay. Version 1.0, Virginia Stormwater Design Specifications. Prepared by the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality Division of Water, Richmond, VA.
  • Washington Department of Ecology. 2015. Stormwater Treatment Technologies Approved through TAPE and CTAPE.
  • Wilson, M., O. M. Gulliver, and R. Hozalski. 2007. Performance Assessment of Underground Stormwater Treatment Devices. 2007-46. Prepared by the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, for the Minnesota Department of Transportation, St. Paul, MN.
  • Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. 2014. Bioretention for Infiltration. Technical Note 1004.


References for stormwater and rainwater harvest and use/reuse

Because of the large number of references on the topic of harvest and use, this list of references correspond with the different sections of the harvest and use section of the manual.

Overview

Design process and sequencing

Design feasibility phase

Design phase storage siting

Design

Required Storage Capacity

  • Lawson,Sarah, Adrienne LaBranche-Tucker, Hans Otto Wack, Rick Hall, Benjamin Sojka, Ed Crawford, David Crawford, and Cabell Brand. 2009. Virginia Rainwater Harvesting Manual. 2nd Edition. Compiled by The Cabell Brand Center, Salem, VA. See Storage Tanks, Tank Sizing.
  • North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality (NC DEQ). April 2014. North Carolina Stormwater BMP Manual. Rainwater Harvesting. Draft document. See Section 25.4.8 – Section 25.4.11.
  • Department of Environment and Conservation, New South Wales. April 2006. Managing Urban Stormwater: Harvesting and Reuse. Sydney, Australia, ISBN 1 74137 875 3. See Section 6.3.1, Storage Volume.

Storage Unit

Collection System

Treatment System

  • Metropolitan Council. Fall 2011. Stormwater Reuse Guide. Prepared by Camp Dresser & McKee, Inc. and others. St. Paul, MN. See Toolbox R.4 and I.3 – Treatment
  • Despins, Christopher. September 2012. Guidelines for Residential Rainwater Harvesting Systems Handbook. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC). ISBN 978-1-100-21183-1. See Chapter 3, Rainwater quality treatment; Table 3-2: Comparison of advantages and disadvantages associated with pre- and post-storage treatment; Table 3.3: Summary of post-storage treatment options (Ontario Guide); and Chapter 3-3: Select and install pre-storage treatment devices.
  • Georgia Department of Community Affairs (DCA). 2009. Georgia Rainwater Harvesting Guidelines. Atlanta, GA. See Section 4.4 and Section 5.3 – Section 5.4.
  • Lawson,Sarah, Adrienne LaBranche-Tucker, Hans Otto Wack, Rick Hall, Benjamin Sojka, Ed Crawford, David Crawford, and Cabell Brand. 2009. Virginia Rainwater Harvesting Manual. Compiled by The Cabell Brand Center, Salem, VA. See Design Guide, First flush diversion and pre-tank filtration - Design Guide, Additional treatment.
  • Macomber, Patricia S. 2010. Guidelines on Rainwater Catchment Systems for Hawaii. College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources. University of Hawaii at Manoa. ISBN 1-929325-23-1. See Chapter 4, Water Treatment.
  • North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality (NC DEQ). April 2014. North Carolina Stormwater BMP Manual. Chapter 25, Rainwater Harvesting. Draft document. See Section 25.4.16 and Section 25.4.22.
  • Texas Water Development Board. 2005. The Texas Manual on Rainwater Harvesting. 3rd Edition. Austin, TX. See Chapter 3, Water Quality and Treatment.
  • Despins, Christopher. 2010. Ontario Residential Rainwater Harvesting Guidelines. See Table 3.3: Summary of post-storage treatment options (Ontario Guide).

Distribution System

Makeup Water Supply System & Backflow Prevention

Operation and maintenance

Environmental concerns

Calculating credits

References for stormwater infiltration

A

B

  • Bean, E.Z., W.F. Hunt, D.A. Bidelspach, 2007b. Evaluation of Four Permeable Pavement Sites in Eastern North Carolina for Runoff Reduction and Water Quality Impacts. ASCE Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering 133: No. 6: 583-592.
  • Bean, E.Z., W.F. Hunt, D.A. Bidelspach. 2007a. A Field Survey of Permeable Pavement Surface Infiltration Rates. ASCE Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering 133: no. 3: 249-255.
  • Beard, P.J. 1940. Longevity of Eberthalla Typhosus in Various Soils. American Journal of Public Health and Nations Health. 1077-82.
  • Betts, Lynn. 1999. Runoff of Soil & Fertilizer. In Wikipedia, edited by Wikimedia.
  • Birch, G. F., M.S. Fazeli, and C. Matthai. 2005. Efficiency of an Infiltration Basin in Removing Contaminants from Urban Stormwater. Environmental Monitoring & Assessment 101: nos. 1-3: 23-38.
  • Bitton, G., and C.P Gerba. 2004. Microbial Pollutants: Their Survival and Transport Pattern to Groundwater. Groundwater Pollution Microbiology.
  • Board of County Commissioners. 2004. Water Resources Management Ordinance. Carroll County, MD.
  • Bowers, Robert, Kevin Burlingham, and Joseph Sun. 2013. Sinkholes and Seepage: Embankment Repair at Hat Creek 1. Hydroworld.com. Last modified August 27, 2013.
  • Braga, Andrea; Horst, Michael; Traver, Michael. 2007. Temperature Effects on the Infiltration Rate through an Infiltration Basin BMP. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering. 133: no. 6: 598 605
  • Brattebo, B. O. and D. B. Booth. 2003. Long-term Stormwater Quantity and Quality Performance of Permeable Pavement Systems. Water Research 37: no. 18: 4369-4376.
  • Brown, R. A., and W. F. Hunt. 2001. Underdrain Configuration to Enhance Bioretention Exfiltration to Reduce Pollutant Loads. Journal of Environmental Engineering 137: no. 11: 1082-1091.
  • Browne, D., A. Deletic, G.M. Mudd, and T.D. Fletcher. 2011. Modeling the Development and Consequences of Clogging for Stormwater Infiltration Trenches. 12th International Conference on Urban Drainage, September 11, 2011, 1-16.
  • Browne, D., A. Deletic, G.M. Mudd, and T.D. Fletcher. 2011. A Comparison of the Hydrologic Effectiveness of a Range of Infiltration Basin Trench Systems in Melbourn with Sandy Loam and Sandy Clay Surrounding Soils with and Without Clogging. Photograph. 12th International Conference on Urban Drainage. September 11, 2011.

C

D

  • Dalgleish, Janet B., and E. Calvin Alexander, Jr.. 1984. Sinkholes and Sinkhole Probability. Map. Winona County, MN. University of Minnesota, MN USGS, and Winona County Board of Commissioners.
  • Davis, A. P., M. Shokouhian, H. Sharma, and C. Minami. 2001. Laboratory Study of Biological Retention for Urban Stormwater Management. Water Environmental Research. 5-14.
  • Davis, A. P., M. Shokouhian, H. Sharma, and C. Minami. 2006. Water Quality Improvement through Bioretention Media: Nitrogen and Phosphorous Removal. Water Environmental Research 78: no.3: 5-14.
  • Davis, A. P., M. Shokouhian, H. Sharma, C. Minami and D. Winogradoff. 2003. Water Quality Improvement through Bioretention: Lead, Copper, and Zinc Removal. Water Environmental Research. 73-82.
  • Dechesne, M., S. Barraud, and J.P Bardin. 2005. Experimental Assessment of Stormwater Infiltration Basin Evolution. Journal of Environmental Engineering 131: no. 7:1090-98.
  • Denich, Chris and Andrea Bradford. 2013. Estimation of Evapotranspiration from Bioretention Areas Using Weighing Lysimeters. Journal of Hydrologic Engineering 15: no. 6: 522-530.
  • Denton, Robert. 2008. The Characterization and Remediation of Sinkholes. [Powerpoint Slides]. Potomac Environmental Services.
  • Department of Agriculture and Consumer Sciences. Redoximorphic Features for Identifying Aquic Conditions. Technical report no. 301. Raleigh, NC: North Carolina State University, n.d.
  • Department of Environmental Protection, Bureau of Watershed Management. 2006. Chapter 6: Structural BMPs. In Pennsylvania Stormwater Best Management Practices Manual. N.p.: n.p.
  • Department of Planning/Environment and Resource Protection Program, Bureau of Resource Management. 2004a. Water Resource Management Manual: Carroll County, Maryland. May ed. Westminster, MD: Carroll County Government.
  • DiBlasi, C. J., H. Li, A. P. Davis, and U. Ghosh. 2009. Removal and Fate of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Pollutants in an Urban Stormwater Bioretention Facility. Environmental Science and Technology 43, no. 2 (2009): 494-502.
  • Domey, William R. 2002. Effect of Underlying Groundwater System on the Rate of Infiltration of Stormwater Infiltration Structures. Storm Water Infiltration & Groundwater Recharge A Conference on Reducing Runoff while Maintaining Water Quality, May 21, 2002. 1-9.
  • Drinking Water Protection Program. Maps and Geospatial Data: Source Water Protection. Minnesota Department of Health.

E

  • Emerson, C.H., & Traver, R.G. 2008. Multiyear and seasonal variation of infiltration from storm-water best management practices. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, 135, no. 5: 593-601.
  • Environmental Science Institute. What is Karst? Caves: A Window into the Edwards Aquifer.
  • Erickson, A.J, J.S. Gulliver, and P.T. Weiss. 2012. Capturing Phosphates with Iron Enhanced Sand Filtration. Water Research 46:3032-42.
  • Erickson, Andrew J., Weiss, Peter T., Gulliver, John S. 2013. Optimizing Stormwater Treatment Practices, A Handbook of Assessment and Maintenance. Springer, New York.
  • Erosion Management Program. 2013. What You Should Know as a Ravine or Bluff Property Owner. Toronto and Region Conservation.

F

  • Fenwick, Ryan. 2012. Sustainable Water Management on Brownfield Sites. University of Louisville, Center for Environmental Policy and Management, October 2012, 1-12.
  • Fischer, D., E.G Charles, and A.L Baehr. 2003. Effects of Stormwater Infiltration on Quality of Groundwater Beneath Retention and Detention Basins. Journal of Environmental Engineering 129, no. 5:464-71.

G

  • Gao, Yongli, E. Calvin Alexander, Jr., and Robert G. Tipping. 2002. The develeopment of a Karst Feature database for Southeastern Minnesota. Journal of Cave and Karst Studies 64, no. 1: 51 57.
  • Ginn, T.R, B.D Wood, K.E Nelson, T.D Scheibe, E.M Murphy, and T.P Clement. 2002. Processes in Microbial Transport in the Natural Surbsurface. Advances in Water Resources 25: no. 8: 1017-42.
  • Green, Jeffery A., E. Calvin Alexander, Jr., William J. Marken, and Scott C. Alexander. 2002. Karst Hydrogeomorphic Units. Map. Mower County, MN: MN DNR, Divison of Waters and University of Minnesota, Department of Geology and Geophysics.
  • Gulliver, J.S., A.J. Erickson and P.T. Weiss, Eds.. 2010. Stormwater Treatment: Assessment and Maintenance. St. Anthony Falls Laboratory, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, 2009.
  • Gurdak J., and Qi L. Sharon. 2012. Vulnerability of Recently Recharged Groundwater in Principle Aquifers of the United States to Nitrate Contamination. Environmental Science and Technology 46: 6004-12.

H

  • Hantush, M.S. 1967. Growth and Decay of Groundwater Mounds in Response to Uniform Percolation. Water Resources Research 3, no. 1:227-234.
  • Haritash, A.K., and C.P. Kaushik. 2009. Biodegradation Aspects of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs): A Review. Journal of Hazardous Materials 169.
  • Hathaway, Jon M., E.I., and William F. Hunt. 2008. Urban Waterways: Removal of Pathogens in Stormwater. North Carolina Cooperative Extension, 1-10.
  • Hewes, Will. [https://aquiferalliance.org/Library/LibraryFiles/Resources/Using_Green_Infrastructure_in_Karst_Regions_American_Riv.pdf Using Green Infrastructure in Karst Regions. American Rivers. 1-5.
  • Hogland, W., M. Marques, and V. Karlaviciene. 2003. Stormwater Runoff from Industrial Areas and Pollution Transport. Proceedings from 1st International Conference on Urban Drainage and Highway Runoff in Cold Climate. Riksgansen, Sweden.
  • Hollander, Justin, Niall Kirkwood, and Julia Gold. 2010. Principles of Brownfield Regeration: Cleanup, Design, and Reuse of Derelict Land. Washington D.C.: Island Press.
  • Hong, E., E. A. Seagren, and A. P. Davis. 2006. Sustainable Oil and Grease Removal from Synthetic Stormwater Runoff Using Bench0Scale Bioretention Studies. Water Environment Research 78: no. 2: 141-155.
  • Hoogestraat, Galen. 2013. Runoff Flowing through Arrowhead Golf Course. Photograph. USGS South Dakota Water Science Center: Stormwater Monitoring in Rapid City. January 7, 2013.
  • Hossain, M.A., Furumai H, Nakajima F, and Aryal R.K. 2007. Heavy Metals Speciation in Soakaways Sediment and Evaluation of Metal Retention Properties of Surrounding Soil. Water Science & Technology 56, no. 11:81-89.
  • Hsieh, C.H. and A. P. Davis. 2005. Evaluation and Optimization of Bioretention Media for Treatment of Urban Storm Water Runoff. Journal of Environmental Engineering 131, no. 11:1521-1531.
  • Hunt, W. F., A. R. Jarrett, J. T. Smith and L. J. Sharkey. 2006. Evaluation Bioretention Hydrology and Nutrient Removal at three Field Sites in North Carolina. Journal of Irrigation Drainage Engineering 132, no. 6:600-608.

J

  • Jammal, S. E., J. W. Casper, A. M. Sallam, D. Fratta, A. J. Puppala, and B. Munhunthan. 2010. Development Mechanism and Remediation of Multiple Spontaneous Sinkholes: A Case History. Proceedings of GeoFlorida: Advances in Analysis, Modeling and Design. pp 681-688.

K

  • Kakuturu, S. and Clark, S. 2015. Effects of Deicing Salts on the Clogging of Stormwater Filter Media and on the Media Chemistry. J. Environ. Eng., 141(9), 04015020.
  • Karathanasis, A., T. Mueller, B. Boone, and Y. Thompson. 2006. Effect of Soil Depth and Texture on Fecal Bacteria Removal from Septic Effluents. Journal of Water and Health 4, no. 3: 395-404.
  • Karst Working Group. 2009. Stormwater Guidelines for Karst Terrain in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Version 2.0. Technical report no. 1. N.p.: Chesapeake Stormwater Network.
  • Kibbey, H.J, D. Hagedorn, and E.L McCoy. 1987. Use of Fecal Streptococci as Indicators of Pollution in Soils. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 35, no. 4:711-17.
  • Komlos, J., and T. G. Traver. 2012. Long-term Orthophosphate Removal in a Field-scale Storm-water Bioinfiltration Rain Garden. Journal of Environmental Engineering 138, no. 10: 991-998.
  • Kroening, Sharon, and Mark Ferrey. 2013. The Condition of Minnesota's Groundwater, 2007-2011. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. August 2013.

L

  • Laughland, John Charles. 2007. Stormwater Management Design in Karst Terrane: Adjusting Hydrology Models and Using Karstic Features. Facility Design Group. pp. 1-6.
  • Lawrence, S.J. 2006. Description, Properties, and Degradation of Selected Volatile Organic Compounds Detected in Ground Water – A Review of Selected Literature. Review. U.S. Geological Survey.
  • Lewis, W.J, S.S Foster, and B.S Drasar. 1980. International Reference Centre for Waste Disposal (IRCWD). Report no. 01/82. Duebendorf, Switzerland: International Reference Centre for Waste Disposal (IRCWD).
  • Li, H. and A. P. Davis. 2009. Water Quality Improvement through Reductions of Pollutant Loads Using Bioretention. Journal of Environmental Engineering 135, no. 8:567-576.
  • Li, L. and A. P. Davis. 2014. Urban Stormwater Runoff Nitrogen Composition and Fate in Bioretention Systems. Environmental Science and Technology 48, no. 6: 3403-3410.
  • Lin, C., Greenwald, D., & Banin, A. 2003. Temperature dependence of infiltration rate during large scale water recharge into soils. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 67, no. 2, 487-493.
  • Low Impact Development, Inc. 2007. Nitrogen Cycle in Soil. Image. Urban Design Tools.

M

  • Machusick, M.D. and R. G. Traver. 2009. The Observed Effects of Stormwater Infiltration on Groundwater. World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2009: Great Rivers. pp 5343-5353.
  • Maimone M., D. E. O’Rourke, J. O. Knighton, and C.P. Thomas. 2011. Potential Impacts of Extensive Stormwater Infiltration in Philadelphia. Environmental Engineer Applied Research and Practice 14, Fall. pp. 1-12.
  • Maniquiz, Marla C., Lee So-Young, and Kim Lee-Hyung. 2010. Long-Term Monitoring of Infiltration Trench for Nonpoint Source Pollution Control. Water, Air & Soil Pollution 212, nos. 1-4:13-26.
  • Maniquiz-Redillas, M.C., F.K. Geronimo, and L.H. Kim. 2014. Investigation on the effectiveness of pretreatment in stormwater management technologies. J. Environ Sci (China). 26(9):1824-30
  • Marder, Jenny. 2011. Ice Salt Truck. Photograph. PBS NEWSHOUR: How Does Salt Battle Road Ice? January 18, 2011.
  • Margolis, Sara. 2012. Sustainable Stormwater Management on Redeveloped Brownfield Sites in New York City. [Powerpoint Slides]. Pratt Institute, Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development.
  • McFeters, G.A, and D.G Stuart. 1972. Survival of Coliform Bacteria in Natural Water: Field and Laboratory Studies with Membrane-Filter Chambers. Applied Microbiology 24, no. 5:805-11.
  • Mikkelsen, P.S, M. Hafliger, M. Ochs, Jacobsen, J.C Tjell, and M. Boller. 1997. Pollution of Soil and Groundwater from Infiltration of Highly Contaminated Stormwater – A Case Study. Water Science and Technology 36, nos. 8-9: 325-30.
  • Minnesota Department of Health. July 1, 2007. Flow Chart for Evaluating Proposed Stormwater Infiltration Projects in Areas with Vulnerable Groundwater. Drinking Water Protection Program. Illustration.
  • Minnesota Department of Health. 2015. Volatile Organic Compounds in Your Home. Minnesota Department of Health.
  • Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2015. Groundwater Contamination Susceptibility. Map. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources: Geomorphology.
  • Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. 2014. Groundwater Pollution Sensitivity. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Last modified 2014.
  • Minnesota Department of Natural Resources: Division of Lands and Minerals. Completed Aggregate Maps. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.
  • Minnesota Stormwater Manual contributors, Karst, Minnesota Stormwater Manual. (accessed June 4, 2015).
  • MN USGS, Minnesota Geospatial Information Office. Bedrock Grid Data. GIS Data.
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. 2013. Petroleum Brownfields and Voluntary Investigation and Cleanup Programs. In Brownfield Program Response Action Plans. July ed. N.p.: Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Industrial Stormwater. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency: Stormwater. Last modified April 27, 2015.
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Leaks/Tanks Search. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Superfund Program.
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. 2013. RCRA Cleanup Site Search. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Superfund Program. Last modified February 28, 2013.
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Superfund Program Site Search. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Superfund Program. Last modified September 16, 2014.
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. What’s in My Neighborhood. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency: WIMN. Last modified March 30, 2015.
  • Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. 2001. Effects of Land Use on Ground Water Quality, St. Cloud Area, Minnesota – Short Report.
  • Mohamed, M. A. Kachchu , T. Lucke and F. Boogaard. 2013. Preliminary investigation into the pollution reduction performance of swales used in a stormwater treatment train. Water Science & Technology. 69(5):1014-20

N

O

  • Olson, N.C., J.S. Gulliver, J.L. Nieber and M. Kayhanian. 2013. Remediation to Improve Infiltration into Compact Soils. Journal of Environmental Management. 117:85-95
  • OSWER. 2013. National Priorities List (NPL). U.S. EPA Superfund Sites. Last modified October 16.

P

  • Passeport, E., W. F. Hunt, D. E. Line, R. A. Smith, and R. A. Brown. 2009. Field Study of the Ability of Two Grassed Bioretention Cells to Reduce Storm-Water Runoff Pollution. Journal of Irrigation Drainage Engineering 135, no. 4:505-510.
  • Paus, K.H., J. Morgan, J.S. Gulliver, T. Leiknes and R.M. Hozalski. 2014. Assessment of the Hydraulic and Toxic Removal Capacities of Bioretention Cells after 2 to 8 Years of Service. Water, Soil and Air Pollution, 225 (1803).
  • Pitt, R and R. Field. 1999. Groundwater Contamination Potential from Stormwater Infiltration Practices. Urban Water, 1, no. 3: 217-236. 1994.
  • Pitt, R, S Clark, K Parmer, R Field, and T.P O'Connor. 1994. Potential Groundwater Contamination for International and Non-Intentional Stormwater Infiltration. U.S. EPA.
  • Pitt, R., S. Clark, and K. Parmer. 1994. Pollution Removal Process in the Subsurface. Photograph.
  • Pitt, R., S. Clark, and R. Field. 1999. Groundwater Contamination Potential from Stormwater Infiltration Practices. Urban Water 1, no. 3: 217-36.
  • Pitt, Robert, Alex Maestre, and Renee Morquecho. 2004. The National Stormwater Quality Database (NSQD, version 1.1). University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL.
  • Pratt, C. J., A. P. Newman, and P. C. Bond. 1999. Mineral Oil Bio-Degredation within a Permeable Pavement: Long-term Observations.” Water Science and Technology 39, no. 2:103-109.
  • Prey, J., L. Chern, S. Holaday, C. Johnson, T. Donovan, and P. Mather. Nonpoint Source and Land Management Section. In The Wisconsin Stormwater Manual Part 1: Overview. N.p.: Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Bureau of Water Resources Managment, n.d.

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  • Tate, R.L. 1978. Cultural and Environmental Factors Affecting the Longevity of Escherichia coli in Water: A Current Perspective. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 35: no. 5: 925-29.
  • Tennessee Stormwater Management. 2015. Appendix B: Stormwater Design Guidelines for Karst Terrain. Management and Design Guidance Manual. The Tennessee Permanent Stormwater Management Training. Last modified March 2, 2015.
  • Tennessee Stormwater Management. 2015. Management and Design Guidance Manual. The Tennessee Permanent Stormwater Management Training. Last modified March 2, 2015.
  • The Federal Interagency Stream Restoration Working Group. "Figure 3.21: Relationship between impervious cover and surface runoff." Image. Stream Corridor Restoration: Principles, Processes, and Practices, August 2001, 3-23.
  • Thomas, Brian F., and Richard M. Vogel. 2012. Impact of Storm Water Recharge Practices on Boston Groundwater Elevations. Journal of Hydrologic Engineering 17, no. 8:923-932.
  • Thompson, Steve. 2015. Karst in Minnesota. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Last modified February 2, 2015.
  • Tipping, Robert G., Jeffery A. Green, and E. Calvin Alexander, Jr.. 2001 Karst Features. Map. Wabasha County, MN: University of Minnesota, MN USGS, Wabasha County Board of Commissioners and MN DNR, Division of Waters.

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References for stormwater ponds

References for stormwater wetlands

References for trees

This list contains references for all tree articles in the Manual. Reference lists can also be found on each individual tree page.

  • Allison, R.A., F.H.S. Chiew, and T. A. McMahon. 1998. Nutrient Contribution Of Leaf Litter In Urban stormwater. Journal of Environmental Management. 54: 269-272.
  • Baker, Brent, D. M. Olszyk, and D. Tingey. 1996. Digital Image Analysis to Estimate Leaf Area. Journal of Plant Physiology. 148: 530-535.
  • Baker, Donald G., W.W. Nelson, and E.L. Kuehnast. 1979. Climate of Minnesota Part XII - The Hydrologic Cycle and Soil Water. Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station Series/Report No.: Technical Bulletin 322.
  • Bakker. J.W. 1983. Groeiplaats en watervoorziening van straatbomen. Groen. 39(6)205-207; OBIS, 1988. Bomen in straatprofielen – Voorbeelden – Groeiplaatsberekening. Uitgeverij van de Vereniging van de Nederlandse gemeenten, ‘s-Gravenhage 1988. 63 p. Cited in Kopinga 1991.
  • Barret, M., M. Limouzin, and D. Lawler. 2011. Performance Comparison of Biofiltration Designs. World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2011. pp. 395-404.
  • Bassuk, Nina. 2010. Using CU-Structural Soil to Grow Trees Surrounded by Pavement. In The Great Soil Debate Part II: Structural soils under pavement. ASLA Annual Meeting Handout.
  • Bassuk, Nina, Jason Grabosky, Anthony Mucciardi, and Gary Raffel. 2011. Ground-penetrating Radar Accurately Locates Tree Roots in Two Soil Media Under Pavement. Arboriculture & Urban Forestry. 37(4): 160–166.
  • Bassuk, Nina, Jason Grabosky, and Peter Trowbridge]. 2005. Using CU-Structural Soil™ in the Urban Environment. Urban Horticulture Institute, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.
  • Beven, Keith. 2012. In Rainfall-Runoff Modelling: The Primer. Second Edition, by Keith Beven. 398-448. Chichester, UK. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
  • Breen, P., L. Denman, P. May, and S. Leinster. 2004. Street trees as stormwater treatment measures. In 2004 International Conference on Water Sensitive Urban Design – Cities as catchments 21-25 November 2004, 21-25 November 2004, Adelaide.
  • Breuer, L., K. Eckhardt, and H.-G. Frede. 2003. Plant parameter values for models in temperate climates. Ecological Modelling. 169:237-293.
  • Busiahn, Jacob, and Sean Peterson. 2013. All you need to Know about Community Gravel Beds. University of Minnesota Department of Forest Resources.
  • Cappiella, Karen, Tom Schueler, and Tiffany Wright. 2006. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual Part 2. Conserving and Planting Trees at Development Sites. Second in a Three-Part Manual Series on Using Trees to Protect and Restore Urban Watersheds. Prepared for and published by: United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry.
  • Center for Watershed Protection. 2006. Technical Memorandum 1 - Literature Review Research in Support of an Interim Pollutant Removal Rate for Street Sweeping and Storm Drain Cleanout Activities. A project supported by the U.S. Chesapeake Bay Program Grant CB-97322201-0
  • Cescatti, A. 2007. Indirect estimates of canopy gap fraction based on the linear conversion of hemispherical photographs methodology and comparison with standard thresholding techniques. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 143:1-12.
  • Chase, T. N., R. A. Pielke, T.G. F. Kittel, R. Nemani, and S. W. Running. 1996. Sensitivity of a general circulation model to global changes in leaf area index. Journal of Geophysical Research 101:7393-7408.
  • Cheng, Lei, Zongxue Xu, Dingbao Wang, and Ximing Cai. 2011. Assessing interannual variability of evapotranspiration at the catchment scale using satellite‐based evapotranspiration data sets. Water Resources Research 47: W09509.
  • Churchill, D. J., A. J. Larson, M. C. Dahlgreen, J. F. Franklin, P. F. Hessburg, and J. A. Lutz. 2013. Restoring forest resilience: From reference spatial patterns to silvicultural prescriptions and monitoring. Forest Ecology and Management 291: 442-457.
  • Coder, Kim. 2007. Soil Compaction Stress and Trees: Symptoms, Measures, and Treatments. Warnell School Outreach Monograph WSFNR07-9.
  • Confalonieri, R., M. Foi, R. Casa, S. Aquaro, E. Tona, M. Peterle, A. Boldini, G. De Carli, A. Ferrari, G. Finotto, T. Guarneri, V. Manzoni, E. Movedi, A. Nisoli, L. Paleari, I. Radici, M. Suardi, D. Veronesi, S. Bregaglio, G. Cappelli, M.E. Chiodini, P. Dominonia, C. Francone, N. Frasso, T. Stella, and M. Acutis. 2013. Development of an app for estimating leaf area index using a smartphone. Truenss and precision determination and comparison with other indirect methods. Computers and Electronics in Agriculture 96: 67-74.
  • Cowen W.F, Lee G.F. 1973. Leaves as a source of phosphorus. Environ Sci Technol 7:853–854.
  • CRA. Tools for Agro-Meteorology and Biophysical Modelling: Evapotranspiration.
  • Couenberg Els. A.M. 1993. Amsterdam Tree Soil. In: The Landscape Below Ground. Proceedings of an international workshop on tree root development in urban soils.
  • D'Arrigo, R. D., C. M. Malmstrom, G. C. Jacoby, S. O. Los, and D. E. Bunker. 2000. Correlation between maximum latewood density of annual tree rings and NDVI based estimates of forest productivity. International Journal of Remote Sensing 21: 2329-2336.
  • Davis, A.P; W. F. Hunt, G.R. Traver, and M. Clar. 2009 Bioretention Technology: Overview of Current Practice and Future Needs. J. Environ. Eng-ASCE. 135(3):109-117.
  • Day, S. D., and N. L. Bassuk. 1994. A review of the effects of soil compaction and amelioration treatments on landscape trees. Journal of Arboriculture 20:9-17.
  • Denman, Liz. 2006. Are Street Trees And Their Soils An Effective Stormwater Treatment Measure? The 7th National Street Tree Symposium.
  • Denman, Elizabeth C., Peter B. May, and Gregory M. Moore. 2011. The use of trees in urban stormwater Management. Trees, people and the built environment: Proceedings of the Urban Trees Research Conference. 13–14 April 2011. Hosted by The Institute of Chartered Foresters At The Clarendon Suites, Edgbaston, Birmingham, UK Edited by Mark Johnston and Glynn Percival. Forestry Commission: Edinburgh.
  • Dorney JR. 1986. Leachable and total phosphorus in urban street tree leaves. Water Air Soil Pollut 28:439–443.
  • DTAH, Lead Consultant, ARUP, Engineering, and James Urban, Urban Trees + Soils Urban Forest Innovations, Arborist. 2013. Tree Planting Solutions in Hard Boulevard Surfaces Best Practices Manual. Project # A21065. Prepared for: City of Toronto.
  • Dwyer, John F.; H.W. Schroeder, J.J. Louviere, and D.H. Anderson. 1989. Urbanities [sic] Willingness to Pay for Trees and Forests in Recreation Areas. Journal of Arboriculture 15(10).
  • Dwyer, J. F.; Schroeder, H.W.; Gobster, P. H. 1991. The Significance of Urban Trees and Forests: Toward a Deeper Understanding of Values. Journal of Arboriculture 17(10).
  • Dwyer, J. F., D. J. Nowak, M. H. Noble, and S. M. Sisinni. 2000. Connecting people with ecosystems in the 21st centure: An assessment of our nation's urban forests. USDA Forest Service Technical Report, Forest Service, USDA, USDA Forest Service.
  • Eichhorn, J., and P. Roskams. 2013. Chapter 8 - Assessment of Tree Conditions. Developments in Environmental Science. 12:139-167.
  • Escobedo, F. J., and D. J. Nowak. 2009. Spatial heterogeneity and air pollution removal by an urban forest. Landscape and Urban Planning 90:102-110.
  • Facility for Advancing Water Biofiltration (FAWB). 2009. Biofiltration Filter Media Guidelines (Version 3.01).
  • Fassman, EA, R. Simcock, and S. Wang. 2013. Media specification for stormwater bioretention devices, Prepared by Auckland UniServices for Auckland Council. Auckland Council technical report, TR2013/011.
  • Flint, A. L., and S. W. Childs. 1991. Use of the Priestly-Taylor evaporation equation for soil water limited conditions in a small forest clearcut. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 56. pp247-260.
  • Foster, R. S., and J. Blaine. 1978. Urban tree survival: trees in the sidewalk. Journal of Arboriculture 4:14-17.
  • Gillman, J.H. and G.R. Johnson. 1999. Planting and Transplanting Trees and Shrubs. University of Minnesota Extension WW-03825.
  • Gilman, Edward F. 2011. Specifications for Planting Trees and Shrubs in the Southeastern U.S. Document ENH856. Environmental Horticulture, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida.
  • Gilman, E. 2011. Sample nursery stock specification for shade trees.
  • Gilman, Edward F. 2013. Sample planting specifications for trees. Environmental Horticulture Department, University of Florida Gainesville.
  • Gilman, Ed. 2011. Illustrated Guide to Pruning. 3rd edition. Cengage Learning: Independence, KY.
  • Gomez-Baggethun, E., and D. N. Barton. 2013. Classifying and valuing ecosystem services for urban planning. Ecological Economics 86:235-245.
  • Gong, A., W. Xiang, Q. Zhengjun, and H. Yong. 2013. A handheld device for leaf area measurement. Computers and Electronics in Agriculture 98:74-80.
  • Gonzales, L. M., J. W. Williams, and J. O. Kaplan. 2008. Variations in leaf area index in northern and eastern North Americal over the past 21,000 years: a data-model comparison. Quaternary Science Reviews 27:1453-1466.
  • Grabosky, Jason, Edward Haffner, and Nina Bassuk. 2009. Plant Available Moisture in Stone-soil Media for Use Under Pavement While Allowing Urban Tree Root Growth. Arboriculture & Urban Forestry 35(5):271-278.
  • Green, S. R. 1993. Radiation balance, transpiration, and photosynthesis of an isolated tree. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 64:201-221.
  • Grimmond, C.S.B. and T.R. Oke. 1999. Evapotranspiration in Urban Areas. Proceedings of Impacts of Urban Growth on Surface Water and Groundwater Quality. Birmingham.
  • Gulliver, J. S., A. J. Erickson, and P. T. Weiss. 2010. Evaporation and Evapotranspiration Stormwater Treatment: Assessment and Maintenance. University of Minnesota, St. Anthony Falls Laboratory.
  • Healy, R. W., and B. R. Scanlon. 2010. Estimating Groundwater Recharge. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
  • Heisler, G.M. 1986. Energy Savings With Trees. Journal of Arboriculture 12:5:113-125.
  • Heisler, Gordon M. 1990. Tree plantings that save energy. In: Rodbell, Philip D., ed. Proceedings of the Fourth Urban Forestry Conference, October 15-19, 1989. St. Louis, MO. Washington, DC: American Forestry Association.
  • Helliwell, D.R. 1986. The Extent of Tree Roots. Arboriculture Journal 10:341-347. Updated in Letter to the Editor. Arboricultural Journal: The International Journal of Urban Forestry, Volume 16, Issue 2, 1992.
  • Helvey, J. D., and J. H. Patric. 1965. Canopy and litter interception of rainfall by hardwoods of Eastern United States. Water Resources Research 1, No. 2: 193-206.
  • Henderson, C.F.K. 2008. The Chemical and Biological Mechanisms of Nutrient Removal from Stormwater in Bioretention Systems. Thesis. Griffith School of Engineering, Griffith University.
  • Hermans, C., M. Smeyers, R. M. Rodriguez, M. Eyletters, M. Strasser, and J.-P. Delhaye. Quality assessment of urban trees: A comparitive study of physiological characterisation, airborne imaging and on site fluorescence monitoring by the OJIP-test. Journal of Plant Physiology 160 (2003): 81-90.
  • Hickman, J.M. Jr. 2011. Evaluating the Role of Evapotranspiration in the Hydrology of Bioinfiltration and bioretention Basins using Weighing Lysimeters. M.S. thesis, Villanova University.
  • Hinman, C., and B. Wulkan. 2012. Low Impact Development: Technical Guidance Manual for Puget Sound. Publication No. PSP 2012-3.
  • Hobbie, Sarah E., Lawrence A. Baker, Christopher Buyarski, Daniel Nidzgorski, Jacques C. Finlay. 2013. Decomposition of tree leaf litter on pavement: implications for urban water quality. Urban Ecosystems. September issue.
  • Hofman, J., I. Stokkaer, L. Snauwaert, and R. Samson. 2012. Spatial distribution assessment of particulate matter in an urban street canyon using biomagnetic leaf monitoring of tree crown deposited particles. Environmental Pollution, 2012: 1-10.
  • Hong, E., E.A. Seagren, and A. P. Davis. 2006. Sustainable Oil and Grease Removal from Synthetic Stormwater Runoff Using Bench-Scale Bioretention Studies. Water Environ. Res. 78(2):141-155.
  • Imbert, D., and J. Portecop. 2008. Hurricane disturbance and forest resilience: Assessing structural vs. functional changes in a Caribbean dry forest. Forest Ecology and Management. 255:3494-3501.
  • International Society of Arboriculture. 2010. Guide for Developing Planting Specifications.
  • Jenkins, J. K. G., Wadzuk, B. M., & Welker, A. L. 2010. Fines Accumulation and Distribution in a Storm-Water Rain Garden Nine Years Postconstruction. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, 136(12):862-869.
  • Jim, C.-Y. 2005. Monitoring the performance and decline of heritage trees in urban Hong Kong. Journal of Environmental Management. 74:161-172.
  • Jim, C.-Y. 2004. Spatial differentiation and landscape-ecological assessment of heritage trees in urban Guangzhou (China). Landscape and Urban Planning 69:51-68.
  • Jim, C.-Y., and H. Zhang. 2013. Defect-disorder and risk assessment of heritage trees in urban Hong Kong. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening. In Press.
  • Jim, C.-Y., and H. Zhang. 2013. Species diversity and spatial differentiation of old-valuable trees in urban Hong Kong. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening 12:171-182.
  • Johnson, Gary R. 1999. Protecting Trees from Construction Damage. University of Minnesota Extension publication WW-06135.
  • Johnson, Jill; Gary Johnson; Maureen McDonough; Lisa Burban; and Janette Monear. 2008. Tree Owner's Manual for the Northeastern Midwestern United States. United States of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Area, State and Private Forestry, NA-FR-04-07.
  • Kalinosky, Paula. ,L. Baker, S. Hobbie. 2012. Quantifying Nutrient Load Reductions Through Targeted, Intensive Street Sweeping – A Field Study by the University of Minnesota in Partnership with the City of Prior Lake. Abstract for Minnesota Water Resources Conference, October 17.
  • Kalinosky, Paula. Lawrence A. Baker, Sarah Hobbie, and Ross Bintner. 2013a. Quantifying Nutrient Removal through Targeted Intensive Street Sweeping. UPDATES: March 2013 (volume 8 - issue 3).
  • Kalinosky, P., L. Baker, S. Hobbie. 2013b. Quantifying nutrient removal by street sweeping. Presentation by Paula Kalinosky at the 2013 International Low Impact Development Conference, St. Paul., August 18-21, 2013.
  • Kaplan, R.; and S. Kaplan. 1989. The Experience of Nature: A Psychological Perspective. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.
  • Keim, Richard F. 2004. Comment on Measurement and modeling of growing-season canopy water fluxes in a mature mixed deciduous forest stand, southern Ontario, Canada. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 124:277-279.
  • Kent, D., S. Shultz, T. Wyatt, and D. Halcrow. 2006. Soil Volume and Tree Condition in Walt Disney World Parking Lots. Landscape Journal 25:1–06
  • Kirnbauer, M. C., B. W. Baetz, and W. A. Kenney. 2013. Estimating the stormwater attenuation benefits derived from planting four monoculture species of deciduous trees on vacant and underutilize urban landparcels. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening. 12:401-407.
  • Kopinga, J. 1991. The Effect of Restricted Volumes of Soil on the Growth and development of Street Trees. Journal of Arboriculture 17(3):57-63
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  • Law, B. E., A. Cescatti, and D. Baldocchi. 2001. Leaf area distribution and radiative transfer in open-canopy forests: implications for mass and energy exchange. Tree Physiology 21:777-787.
  • Law, Neely L. Katie DiBlasi, Upal Ghosh, With contributions from: Bill Stack, Steve Stewart,Ken Belt, Rich Pouyat, and Clair Welty. 2008. Deriving Reliable Pollutant Removal Rates for Municipal Street Sweeping and Storm Drain Cleanout Programs in the Chesapeake Bay Basin. Prepared by the Center for Watershed Protection as fulfillment of the U.S. EPA Chesapeake Bay Program grant CB-973222-01.
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References for general stormwater information

References for Unified Sizing Criteria




Original Stormwater Manual references

This page provides a list of references from the original Minnesota Stormwater Manual, published in 2005. More recent references are contained within the individual pages and sections of the manual as updates are made to the manual.

  • Aichinger, C., 2004. Understanding the West Nile Virus. Woodbury Bulletin (newspaper opinion page), August 11, 2004. Contact Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District, North St. Paul, MN.
  • Alexander, E.C. and Y. Gao, 2002. Copyrighted graphic of Minnesota Karst Lands.
  • Allen P. and R. Narramore. 1985. Bedrock controls on stream channel enlargement with urbanization, North Central Texas. Water Resources Bulletin. 21(6): 1037-1048.
  • American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). 2003. International database on pollutant removal performance of stormwater best management practices.
  • Andrews, W.J., J.R. Stark, A.L. Fong and P.E. Hanson, 1999. Ground-water quality along a flowpath in surficial outwash aquifer in the Upper Mississippi River Basin – The influence of land use. Hydrological Science and Technology, 15(1-4):66-75. Special Issue: 4thUSA/CIS Joint Conference, November 7-10, 1999, San Francisco. American Institute of Hydrology.
  • Aplikowski, S., J. Hafner, and B. Wilson. 2005. Minneapolis Chain of Lakes: A decade of Watershed Rehabilitation. Lakeline. Spring 2005.Aquafor Beech Ltd. 1999. Draft Final Stormwater Management Planning and Design Manual. Ontario Ministry of the Environment.
  • Arendt, R. 1997. Designing Open Space Subdivisions. Natural Lands Trust. Media, PA
  • Avinmelich, Y., J. McHenry and J. Ross. 1984. Decomposition of Organic Matter in Lake Sediments. Environmental Science and Technology.
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  • Bäckström, M., 1999. Series of Papers in Licentiate Thesis, Luleå University of Technology.
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  • Baker, J.M., 1997. Vanishing Ponds Not a Sure Sign of Spring. Agricultural Research, April, p.9.
  • Barodziej, W. and S. Blood. 2004. Shore Restoration of a High-use Urban Lake.
  • Bengtsson, L., 1981. Snowmelt-Generated Runoff in Urban Areas. In Proceedings, Second International Conference on Urban Storm Drainage, Urbana, Illinois, June 14-19, 1981, pp.444-451.
  • Bledsoe, B. 2001. Relationships of stream response to hydrologic changes. Linking Stormwater BMP Designs and Performance to Receiving Water Impacts Mitigation Proceedings. Snowmass, CO.
  • Booth, D. and P. Henshaw. 2001. Rates of channel erosion in small urban streams. Water Science and Application 2:17-38.
  • Booth, D. 1990. Stream channel incision following drainage basin urbanization. Water Resources Bulletin. 26(3): 407-417.
  • Bouwer, H. and R. C. Rice. 1989. Effect of Water Depth in Ground-water Recharge Basins on Infiltration. Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering, Vol. 115, No. 4, pp. 556-567.
  • Brown, E., D. Caraco and R. Pitt, 2004. Illicit Discharge Detection and Elimination: A Guidance Manual for Program Development and Technical Assessment. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
  • Brown, T. and J. Simpson. 2001. “Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes I: Determining the Trophic State of Your Lake.” Watershed Protection Techniques. 3 (4): 771-781. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
  • Brown, W. and T. Schueler, 1997. Economics of stormwater best management practices in the Mid-Atlantic region. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, MD.
  • Burton, G. and R. Pitt. 2002. Stormwater effects handbook: a toolbox for watershed managers, scientists and engineers. CRC/Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, FL.
  • Busacker, G. 2004. Protecting Water Resources Based on a Collaborative Community Effort. AASHTO National Environmental Stewardship Competition Application.
  • Buttle, J.M., 1990. Effect of suburbanization upon snowmelt runoff. Hydrol. Sci. Jour., 35(3):285-302.
  • Buttle, J.M. and F. Xu, 1988. Snowmelt Runoff in Suburban Environments. Nordic Hydrology, 19:19-40.
  • Cappiella, K. 2005. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual Part 1: Conserving Trees at the Watershed Scale. Prepared for: USDA Forest Service. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
  • Cappiella, K. 2005. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual Part 1: Conserving Trees at the Watershed Scale. Prepared for: USDA Forest Service. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
  • Capiella, K, T. Schueler and T. Wright. 2005. Conserving and planting trees at development sites. USDA Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD
  • Cappiella, K., Schueler, T.R. and T. Wright. 2005. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual. Part 1: Methods for Increasing Forest Cover in a Watershed. USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry. Newtown Square, PA.
  • Cappiella, K., Schueler, T.R. and T. Wright. 2005. Urban Watershed Forestry Manual. Part 2: Conserving and Planting Trees at Development Sites. USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry. Newtown Square, PA.
  • Capuccitti, D and W. Page, 2000. Stream response to stormwater management best management practices in Maryland. Maryland Department of the Environment. Final Deliverable for a US EPA 319 Grant.
  • Caraco, D. 2001. “Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes III: Evaluating the Impact of Watershed Treatment.” Watershed Protection Techniques. 3 (4): 791-796. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
  • Caraco, D. and R. Claytor, 1997. Stormwater BMP Design Supplement for Cold Climates. Center for Watershed Protection, Ellicott City, Maryland.
  • Caraco, D. and T. Brown. 2001. “Managing Phosphorus Inputs Into Lakes II: Crafting an Accurate Phosphorus Budget for Your Lake.” Watershed Protection Techniques. 3 (4): 782-790. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
  • Carroll County, MD. 1996a. Draft Water Resource Management Manual.
  • Carroll County, MD. 1996b. Draft Water Resource Management Ordinance.
  • Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 1998. Better Site Design: a handbook for changing development rules in your community. US EPA. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
  • Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 1998. Nutrient Loading From Conventional and Innovative Site Development. Prepared for: Chesapeake Research Consortium. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
  • Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 1999. Nutrient loading from conventional and innovative site development. Chesapeake Research Consortium. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD.
  • Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 2001. Special Issue on Urban Lake Management: Watershed Protection Techniques 3(4): 745-820.
  • Center for Watershed Protection (CWP). 2003. The impacts of impervious cover on aquatic systems. Watershed Protection Research Monograph No. 1. Center for Watershed Protection. Ellicott City, MD. 142 pp. 11: 165-206.
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  • City of Portland. 2004. Portland’s Stormwater Management Manual. Bureau of Environmental Services. Portland Oregon. www.cleanrivers-pdx.org/tech_resources/2004_swmm.htm
  • City of Seattle, 2003. How soil amendments and compost can aid in Salmon recovery.
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  • Colbeck, S.C., 1991. The layered character of snow covers. Rev. Geophys., 29(1):81-96.
  • Commonwealth of Virginia, 2003. Vector Control: Mosquitoes and Storm Water Management. Stormwater Management Technical Bulletin No 8.
  • Conservation Toronto and Region, 2001. The Storm Water Pollution Prevention Handbook. Copublished with the Ontario Ministry of the Environment.
  • Covington, M. 2002. Modified Sand Filter Design (The Herring/Frock Method). Presented at Delaware Sediment and Stormwater 2002 Conference – The Race for Clean Water. Dover, DE.
  • Debo, T. and A. Reese. 1992. Determining downstream analysis limits for detention facilities. Proceedings from International Conference on Innovative Technologies in the Domain of Urban Stormwater Drainage.
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  • Dorman, M., J. Hartigan, R. Steg, and T. Quaserbarth. 1989. Retention, Detention, and Overland Flow for Pollutant Removal from Highway Stormwater Runoff. Federal Highway Administration Report No. RD-89-202. 179 pp.
  • Duke, D. and K. Shaver. 1999. “Widespread Failure to Comply with U.S. Storm Water Regulations for Industry-Part II: Facility-Level Evaluations to Estimate Number of Regulated Facilities.” Environmental Engineering Science. Vol. 16(4).
  • Duke, D., K. Patel, and B. Masek. 1999. “Widespread Failure to Comply with U.S. Storm Water Regulations for Industry-Part I: Publicly Available Data to Estimate Number of Potentially Regulated Facilities.” Environmental Engineering Science. Vol. 16(4).
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  • Emmons & Olivier Resources, Inc. (EOR). 2000. Brown’s Creek Second Generation Watershed Management Plan.
  • Emmons and Olivier Resources, Inc. 2004. Trout Habitat Preservation Project (THPP) 2004 MAWD Project and Program of the Year Nomination Form.
  • Ferguson, B. and T. Debo. 1990. On-site Stormwater Management: Applications for Landscape and Engineering. 2nd Edition. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.
  • Fillmore Soil and Water Conservation District. 1998. City of Wykoff Sinkhole/Stormw Water Discharge Project. MN BWSR FY 99 State Cost Share Special Project Application.
  • Finkenbine, J., J. Atwater and D. Mavinic. 2000. Stream health after urbanization. Journal of the American Water Resources Association 36(5): 1149-1160.
  • Fish, W. 1988. Behavior of Runoff-Derived Metals in a Well-Fined Paved Catchment/Retention Pond System. Water Resources Research Institute Report No. 103. Oregon State University. 54 pp.
  • Galli, J. 1988. A limnological Study of an Urban Stormwater Management Pond and Stream Ecosystem. M.S. Thesis. Department of Biology. George Mason University. Fairfax, Virginia.
  • Galli, J. 1990. Thermal Impacts Associated with Urbanization and Stormwater Management Best Management Practices. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments. Washington, D.C.
  • Galli, J. 1993. Analysis of Urban Best Management Practice Performance and Longevity in Prince George’s County, Maryland. 202 pp.
  • Gavens, A., D. Revitt, and J. Ellis. 1982. Hydrocarbon Accumulation in Freshwater Sediments of an Urban Catchment. Hydrobiologia (91): 285-292.
  • Georgia (State of), 2001. Stormwater Management Manual.
  • Giesy, J. and R. Hoke. 1991. Freshwater Sediment Quality Criteria: Toxicity Bioassessment in Sediments: Chemistry and Toxicity of In-Place Pollutants. R. Baudo, R. Giesy, and H. Muntau, Editors. Lewis Publishers.
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  • Great Lakes Association. Percent Bedrock Outcrop of Landtype Associations of Northern Minnesota Map.
  • Grizzard, etal. 1983. Final Monitoring Report for Washington Metropolitan Area Nationwide Urban Runoff Project. Chapter 7. Occuquan Watershed Monitoring Lab. Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments.
  • Grizzard, T. 1989. Memorandum dated 22 March 1989. Detention Basin Spoil Disposal Near Twin Beech Court. OWML. Manassas, Virginia. 5 pp.
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  • Illinois Conservation Foundation and Chicago Wilderness, 2005. Changing Cost Perceptions: An Analysis of Conservation Development. Prepared by the Conservation Research Institute
  • Institute of Transportation Engineers Transportation Planning Council Committee
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  • Liptan, T. and C. Brown. 1996. A Cost Comparison of Conventional and Water Quality-based Stormwater Designs. City of Portland. Portland OR.
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