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“Habitat Assessment Using the QHEI “ Edward T. Rankin June 6 City of Columbus, Level 3 Training Course Columbus, Ohio Senior ResearchScientist [email protected] Qualitative Habitat Evaluation Index The Five Major Factors Which Determine the Integrity of Aquatic Resources (from Karr 1981) Alkalinity Solubilities Velocity Temperature D.O. Adsorption pH Chemical Variables Nutrients Turbidity Organics High/Low Extremes Land Use Ground Water Flow Regime Precipitation & Runoff Hardness INTEGRITY OF THE WATER RESOURCE Disease Parasitism Reproduction Biotic Factors Competition Feeding Predation “Principal Goal of the Clean Water Act Nutrients Sunlight Organic Matter Inputs Energy Source Riparian Vegetation Seasonal Cycles Bank Stability Siltation 1o and 2 o Production Width/Depth Habitat Structure Sinuosity Current Substrate Channel Morphology Gradient Canopy Instream Cover Visual Method Tool For Designating Aquatic Life Uses Tool For Assessing Causes of Impairment Correlated With Biological Integrity Associated With Sediment/Nutrient Inputs Effects on Biota Occur At Multiple Scales Matches Resolution of Biological Data Substrate – Size, Quality Instream Cover – Type, Quality, Amount Channel Quality – Sinuosity, Riffle/Pool Development, Channelization, Stability Riparian Width, Type, Bank Stability Pool, Riffle/Run – Depth, Morphology, Current Types, Riffle/Run Substrates Stream Gradient – Standardized by Stream Size Level 2 ◦ This training and site scored independently at last site tomorrow ◦ Sufficient similarity with Instructor Score Level 3 ◦ This training and site scored independently (Level II site above) ◦ Three sites scored outside of this training ◦ Sufficient similarity with all test sites Not explicitly measured in QHEI Reflected in certain metrics Can be limiting to aquatic life in many instances Consider flow regime when interpreting data QHEI and its subcomponents correlated with IBI at multiple scales Data by Site All Years ECBP & HELP Ecoregions Reference Sites ONLY Data by Huc 11 Watershed IBI Data - 1994-2001 ECBP and HELP Ecoregions 60 60 Mean Huc-11 Scale IBI y = 9.98 + 0.43x Site Specific IBI 50 40 30 20 2 R = 0.43 50 40 30 20 2 y = 15.4 + 0.39x R = 0.51 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Site Specific QHEI 80 90 100 10 20 30 40 50 60 Mean Huc-11 Scale QHEI 70 80 Ohio Wadeable Reference Data 100 EWH WWH Modified Probability 80 60 40 20 0 0 20 40 60 QHEI Score 80 100 85 84 83 82 81 42 56 6 55 57 AN A 61b Toledo 57b 61d Pymatuning Lake 57b Cleveland 61 61a 6a 57c 61d 57d 57a Fort Wayne Akron Youngstown 41 61e 61c Wooster 61c Canton 55a 70c 55a Grand Lake 70e 55c 40 Columbus 55f 55b 70b 55e 55b D ayton 70a Marietta 71d 70f Cincinnati 70d 55d 39 d 70 71d 71 69 70 LEVEL III ECOREGIONS OF OHIO (after Omernik 1987) HELP ECBP IP EOLP WAP Structural features include the numerous components of habitat that include living and non- living attributes. Parent geology and climatic influences are two factors that influence structural attributes.. areas of the stream with fast current velocity and shallow depth; the water surface is visibly broken by rocks, boulders, etc. • Functions: – High production zone for macroinvertebrates – Spawning area for many sensitive species – Feeding area for species groups such as darters – Oxygenation areas of the stream that have a rapid, nonturbulent flow; runs are deeper than riffles with faster current velocity than pools; generally located downstream from riffles where the stream narrows; the stream bed is often flat beneath a run and the water surface is not visibly broken. Functions: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Spawning Area Feeding Area Oxygenation Macroinvertebrate Production an area of the stream with slow current velocity; depth greater than riffle and run areas; the stream bed is often concave; stream width frequently is the greatest; the water surface slope is nearly zero. Functions: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Low Flow Refugia Nursery Area Resting Area Cover Flat, “canal-like” flow Shallow, generally poor habitat Transitional in natural streams Can be predominant in channelized and altered streams P OOL • Functions: - Shallow nursery areas - Invertebrate production Good Stream Habitat Nutrients & Sediment Are Intercepted by Riparian Biomass Leaves, Woody Debris Erosion: Particulate P Dissolved P Riparian Width Bacteria, Fungi Two-Way Movement of Sediment & Nutrients Sunlight is Limited By the Riparian Vegetation Invertebrates (Shredders, Scrapers) Woody Debris SlowsExport of Sediments & Increases Conversion of Nutrients to Desirable Biomass Algae Inverts. Predators Insectivorous Fish Humans Herbivores Fish Predators Bird, Mammal Predators Major Downstream Exports: I. Desirable Biomass (e.g., fish, plants, birds, mammals, sensitive species) II. Low Sediment Delivery III. Water Quality Suitable for ALL Uses Modified Stream Habitat Fine Sediment Bedload with Algae & Detritus Erosion: Sediment with Particulate P Dissolved P Direct Sunlight Affects 100% of Channel; L ight is Not a L imiting Factor One-Way Movement of Sediment & Nutrients IntoStreams Filter Feeding Lack of Woody Debris Invertebrates, Increases Export & Conversion of Nutrients to Detritivores Undesirable Biomass External energy is required to maintain modified environment and maintain agriculturalproduction Predators: Birds, Mammals Grasses Comprise Majority of Riparian “Buffer” Nitrates via Subsurface Drainage Herbivores Rapid Turnover of Nutrients (“Short Spirals”) is a Key Characteristic Predators: Invertebrates Major Downstream Exports: I. Nutrients & Undesirable Biomass (e.g., algae, detritivores, tolerant species) II. High Sediment Delivery Strong Link Between Channel Score and Substrate Score Fine substrates (e.g., silts) source of attached phosphorus. Improved channel form will result in higher channel score, higher substrate scores and less nutrients stored in wetted channel Storm events will re-suspend less nutrients in stream with intact channels than with modified channels May use pebble count data and sediment nutrient concentration from sediment chemical data to create “hypothetical” loads with various habitat types QUESTION: How much channel improvement (e.g., full restoration vs. two-stage channel) is needed to significantly reduce nutrients? Natural and Modified Reference Sites ECBP & HELP Ecoregions 25 QHEI Substrate Score 20 15 10 5 0 0-4 5-8 9 - 12 13 - 16 QHEI Channel Score 17 - 20 http://www.epa.gov/OWOW/monitoring/rbp/ Illinois SHAP U.S. EPA EMAP/NWS Assessment Methods RBP Habitat Form Other State Methods (e.g., quantitative and qualitative) QHEI has been modified for other environment and systems (e.g., HHEI, Lake Erie Shoreline, etc) Goal is to explain variation we observe in aquatic biology ◦ What is relative contribution of habitat condition to observed biology? ◦ What are the factors limiting the biology? ◦ When in doubt about meaning of metric Refer to reference materials Think FUNCTIONALLY! What is hypothetical link between metric and biology (Think like a fish!)