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Water Quality Data – Bridging the Gap Between Science and Management Waccamaw River Volunteer Monitoring Annual Data Conference 2012 GROWTH OF STORMWATER MANAGMENT PROGRAMS Evolution of Stormwater Management Programs Post Construction Program Assessment Promote LID Restoration Projects Require LID Illicit Discharge Detection Programs Monitoring starts 0 5 1 permit cycle = 5 years 10 Years 15 20 Bridging the Gap between Science and Management • Illicit discharge detection – Water Quality Standards – Site specific norms • Your cheat sheets – Provisional reports • Long-term trend detection – It takes a lot of data – And fancy statistics • Area of active research • We are not alone • So what? – Recreational impacts – Aquatic Life impacts • Macrobenthic invertebrates • Provides benchmarks for other programs – Someone has to have the best! Merging data • Most frequent sampling • Next steps with collated data – USGS (continuous) – Few locations (+RF) – Discharge – New plots (XY) – Correlations to establish relationships • Most sampling locations – VM (biweekly) – Even NC! • Not cause and effect – Trend analyses • Detrending • Most different analyses – CCU River Gaging (biweekly) – SC DHEC (every other month) • Rain data – – – – Cocorahs National Climate Data Center Nexrad Weather Underground Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Red Bluff (Kingston Lake) Bucksville Wacca Wache Butler Island (No probability based sites in WR) NORTH CAROLINA RF Buck Creek discharge of high conductivity water CW EP HG Site Specific Norms • Percentile rankings • Box plots • Based on data from June 2006 to April 2011 • Close to 120 records at most sites for most parameters Value > 90th percentile 90th percentile 75th percentile Median 25th percentile 10th percentile Value < 10th percentile Provisional Report No Water Quality Standard High conductivity base flow in groundwater 75th percentile Water flows Water flows Murrells Landing (Site 9): 4 miles north of Conway Seasonal Mann-Kendall Trend Analysis N = 2512 measurements from 1995 to 2013 p = 0.0000 1. Increased Ditching and loss of wetlands increases flash flooding 2. Lowering of groundwater table causes increased acidity 3. Road dams impound water From Riggs, et al. (2000) Quick Annual Report Monthly Mean Summertime DO CW: 62% of daily means < 4 mg/L from 5/1/12 to 9/17/12 Annual Summertime Mean E. coli Annual Mean E. coli Annual Mean Total Dissolved Nitrogen Annual Mean Turbidity CWA Ultimate Goal: BIOINTEGRITY Benthic macroinvertebrates Species abundance and diversity measures combined into indices Ecosystem specific: salt and freshwater Pollution sensitive species indicate “good” water quality Caddisfly Larvae Stonefly Larvae Hellgrammite Beetle Larvae Ephemeroptera-Plecoptera-Trichoptera (EPT) Mayfly Larvae Biological Impairment Pollution insensitive species indicate “poor” water quality Aquatic Worms Midge Larvae (Blood Worm) & snails Blackfly Larvae Stressor Precipitation Dry deposition Industrial Emissions Riparian Buffer Wind Erosion Discharge Spray Drift An agent that can induce changes in organisms. •Physical stressors •Construction Runoff •Dams •Noise Impervious Surfaces Hydrologic Modification •Large fishing nets •Habitat alteration Erosion Altered Biological Communities •Chemical stressors Infiltration Infiltration •Pesticides •Industrial effluents GW Recharge to and from Stream •Acid deposition •Biological stressors ACUTE versus CHRONIC •Invasive species •Pathogens Next class