Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
54 lines (45 loc) · 4.3 KB

836-preventing-rodent-burrows-in-earthen-embankments.md

File metadata and controls

54 lines (45 loc) · 4.3 KB
layout permalink challenge-id status sidenav card-image agency-logo challenge-title tagline agency partner-agencies-federal partners-non-federal external-url total-prize-offered-cash type-of-challenge submission-start submission-end submission-link prize fiscal-year legal-authority challenge-manager challenge-manager-email description prizes rules
front-matter-data
/challenge/preventing-rodent-burrows-in-earthen-embankments/
836
closed
true
/assets/images/cards/rodent_thumbnail-1.png
usbr.jpg
Preventing Rodent Burrows in Earthen Embankments
Help stop and prevent rodents from endangering earthen dams, canals, and levees
Department of the Interior - Bureau of Reclamation
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
State of Colorado Department of Natural Resources - Dam Safety Branch
$20,000
Ideas
2016/08/29 01:01 AM
2016/10/11 11:59 PM
true
FY16
America COMPETES Act
Chuck Hennig
<p><strong>All official entries must be submitted via the InnoCentive website open on the date of launch:&nbsp;<a href="https://www.innocentive.com/ar/challenge/9933763" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.innocentive.com/ar/challenge/9933763</a></strong></p> <p>Is there a way to stop and prevent rodents from burrowing into earthen embankments of dams, canals, and levees?</p> <p>Rodent burrows can fill with water when the water levels change, creating seepage paths, which can lead to internal erosion in embankments resulting in the potential for catastrophic failure.&nbsp; Embankment failures can cause property damage, loss of life, and interrupt crucial deliveries of water in the West and across the nation.</p> <p>Trapping or baiting rodents on earthen embankments are short-term remedies, and experience has shown that within a short time, the rodents inevitably return.&nbsp; Annual programs of rodent removal over thousands of miles of earthen embankment are cost prohibitive and only marginally successful.&nbsp; Solvers are asked to &ldquo;dig deeper&rdquo; than the rodents and offer creative, cost effective, long-term solutions to this real and serious problem.</p> <p>Download the&nbsp;<a href="{{ site.baseurl }}/assets/document-library/challenge-poster_RODENT_508.pdf">Rodent Prize Competition Poster</a>.</p>
$20,000 in prizes available!
<p><strong>All official entries must be submitted via the InnoCentive website open on the date of launch:&nbsp;<a href="https://www.innocentive.com/ar/challenge/9933763" target="_blank" rel="noopener">https://www.innocentive.com/<wbr />ar/challenge/9933763</a></strong> &nbsp;</p>

Description

All official entries must be submitted via the InnoCentive website open on the date of launch: https://www.innocentive.com/ar/challenge/9933763

Is there a way to stop and prevent rodents from burrowing into earthen embankments of dams, canals, and levees?

Rodent burrows can fill with water when the water levels change, creating seepage paths, which can lead to internal erosion in embankments resulting in the potential for catastrophic failure.  Embankment failures can cause property damage, loss of life, and interrupt crucial deliveries of water in the West and across the nation.

Trapping or baiting rodents on earthen embankments are short-term remedies, and experience has shown that within a short time, the rodents inevitably return.  Annual programs of rodent removal over thousands of miles of earthen embankment are cost prohibitive and only marginally successful.  Solvers are asked to “dig deeper” than the rodents and offer creative, cost effective, long-term solutions to this real and serious problem.

Download the Rodent Prize Competition Poster.

Prizes

$20,000 in prizes available!

Rules

All official entries must be submitted via the InnoCentive website open on the date of launch: https://www.innocentive.com/ar/challenge/9933763