The Provo River Delta Restoration Project reached a major milestone Thursday, March 2, as the Provo River was diverted into a series of channels and ponds, connecting the river with a restored delta and Utah Lake. To mark the occasion, a celebration was held onsite, attended by dozens of community members and government officials from […]
Tag Archives: BIO-WEST
Two of BIO-WEST’s landscape architecture projects were honored at the 2022 Utah Annual Professional Awards Program, hosted by the American Society of Landscape Architects Utah Chapter. The Three Creeks Confluence Open Space project was given the Honor award and was the headliner project under the Urban Design award category. The Red Butte Garden Six Bridges […]
The San Antonio Express News recently published an article, by Elena Bruess, featuring BIO-WEST’s aquatic ecologist, Brad Littrell, and his conservation work to rehabilitate habitat along the San Marcos and Comal Rivers. The goal of the project is protect the endangered plants and animals and restore the balance of native species that live within the […]
As the human population rapidly expands, ecosystems are being severely affected. Human activities have caused a lot of damage, but many scientists are seeking to understand how we can reverse and mitigate this damage. BIO-WEST’s ecologist, Ryan Dillingham, is one such scientist. He specializes in watershed ecology, restoration ecology, and the conservation of threatened and […]
On May 5th, 2021, BIO-WEST lost a great friend, accomplished scientist, business partner, mentor, but most importantly, a part of our family: Martin Ruell Heaney, III, known to most as Marty. Here is a fond remembrance and farewell, as told by BIO-WEST Principle and Marty’s good friend, Ed Oborny. Marty always celebrated life and thus […]
BIO-WEST biologists had the distinguished opportunity to publish a book chapter on the plight of nonnative fishes to the Colorado River basin. The chapter titled, “The Exotic Dilemma: Lessons Learned from Efforts to Recover Native Colorado River Basin Fishes” is part of the book “Standing between Life and Extinction: Ethics and ecology of conserving aquatic […]
Several BIO-WEST employees, along with volunteers from TreeUtah and Ivory Homes, grabbed their shovels and met on the grassy hillside known as Washakie Cemetery, ready to plant an assortment of trees, shrubs, and bushes, Friday, Oct 30. The planting event was a part of a restoration project the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone Nation has […]
BIO-WEST’s study of the endangered razorback sucker (Xyrauchen texanus) started more than 20 years ago, when scientists discovered that a species expected to die out in Lake Mead was actually spawning and recruiting. High Country News contributor and free-lance journalist Ben Goldfarb joined a research crew to find why the razorback sucker is surviving and what this […]







