JV
Member Since 2007
John T. Van Stan II
Associate Professor, Cleveland State University
Professional Experience
Cleveland State University
Associate Professor
2021 - Present
Georgia Southern University
Director and Associate Professor
2012 - 2021
Georgia Southern University
Assistant Professor
2012 - 2017
Show All Professional Experience
Show Less Professional Experience
Education
Doctorate
2012
Honors & Awards
Outstanding Reviewer Award - Water Resources Research
Received December 2019
Publications
Challenges and Capabilities in Estimating Snow Mass Intercepted in Conifer Canopies With Tree Sway M...

Snowpack accumulation in forested watersheds depends on the amount of snow intercepted in the canopy and its partitioning into sublimation, unloadi...

March 09, 2022
AGU Abstracts
Whence Stemflow and Throughfall? Knowledge Graphs Delineating Rainwater Catchments in Urban Tree Canopies
SURFACE WATER CHEMISTRY AS AN INTEGRATED SIGNAL OF ECOSYSTEM VECTORS AND CRITICAL ZONE REACTORS POSTER
biogeosciences | 14 december 2023
Collin Wischmeyer, John T. Van Stan
Currently, the boundaries containing the areas contributing to stemflow generation within tree canopiesis unknown. This is problematic as setting the ...
View Abstract
Shifting from a Hydrology of Data to a Hydrology of Understanding: An interdisciplinary consideration of hydrological information and what causes its distortion and impotency.
ADDRESSING UNCERTAINTY IN WATER ALLOCATION DECISION-MAKING THROUGH WATERSHED MODELING II POSTER
hydrology | 13 december 2023
Jack Simmons, John T. Van Stan
Shifting from a Hydrology of Data to a Hydrology of UnderstandingIn this presentation, I take a philosophical approach to the question of information....
View Abstract
Simulated Drought Stress Reduces Water Interception Capacity of Arboreal Epiphytes from a Maritime Live Oak Forest of the Southeastern United States
FOREST ECOPHYSIOLOGY: FOREST PHYSIOLOGICAL AND ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES FROM MOLECULES TO ECOSYSTEMS IV POSTER
biogeosciences | 16 december 2022
Althea Moore, Jalayna Antoine, Laura Bedoya, Clift...
The species composition of forest canopies can affect hydrological processes. In particular, epiphytic plants that grow in tree canopies can increase ...
View Abstract

Check out all of John T. Van Stan’s AGU Research!
View All Research Now