Limnologist joins Desert Research Institute team
by Tribune Staff
Jun 17, 2010 | 217 views | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print


RENO — No one has spent more time studying Lake Tahoe’s water clarity than Charles R. Goldman, who has agreed to become an adjunct professor in the Division of Hydrologic Sciences at the Desert Research Institute.

“Dr. Goldman is synonymous with Lake Tahoe and science,” said DRI president Stephen Wells. “He has had a stellar career at (the University of California at) Davis, but we’ve also been privileged to share him as a former DRI Nevada Medalist and DRI Foundation Trustee. I’m thrilled that he has agreed to continue his research with DRI. He will be an invaluable resource for our ongoing Tahoe research efforts, the basin’s environmental policy makers, the mentorship of our faculty and our fundraising efforts.”

Goldman will investigate opportunities with DRI faculty for regional, national and international research related to water quality and management issues. He will collaborate with faculty on limnological projects and emerging research directions as well as interact on collaborative projects with active national and international teams working on climate change and watershed management.

Goldman has published four books and more than 400 scientific articles, and has produced four documentary films that are in worldwide distribution. He has served on many national and international committees and is frequently sought for consultation and research missions to foreign countries on major environmental problems.

In his 50-year career at UC Davis, he supervised more than 100 graduate students and 32 postdoctoral researchers. Prior to his tenure at UC Davis, he earned bachelor and master’s degrees from the University of Illinois and a Ph.D. in limnology-fisheries from the University of Michigan.

Goldman is director of the Tahoe Research Group and has pursued long-term ecological research simultaneously at Lake Tahoe and Castle Lake, Calif., since 1958. He successfully combined effective research and social action with his pioneering studies of lake eutrophication, leading to applied engineering solutions, social needs and legal decisions including the development of artificial wetlands and research on alternatives to conventional road salt for deicing highways. This relationship of basic science to political change has been of particular importance to the Lake Tahoe basin. During the summer of 1997, Goldman hosted President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore on his research vessel, which would become the first of the annual Lake Tahoe Forums.
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