September 2008

Municipal In-Stream Monitoring

Accountability in comprehensive sampling

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By Lanse Norris

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Exposed roots from undercut banks provide shelter for macroinvertebrates and fish avoiding predators and storm event high flows.

Pool habitat provides slow, deep water for fish and can provide shelter for those migrating from riffle feeding areas. Lower velocities in depositional pools allow burrowing organisms to thrive.

Trees and shrubs are essential to stream ecology as demonstrated in the fibrous mats of roots’ “resilient matrix for attachment and for shelter for … vertebrates and invertebrates” (Bourne 2003). Leaf packs shelter and provide food for Tipulidae and other shredders whose discharged waste supports filter feeders downstream such as Dipteran (black fly) larvae in family Simuliidae as well as Hydrosychidae. In fact, “Stream ecology is fundamentally different from lakes and rivers in that CPOM, coarse particulate organic matter, not algae, is the most important food source” (Bourne 2003).

Somewhat rare in Cobb County, macrophytic (or macroscopic) vegetation found in glide pool streams stabilize sediment, cycle nutrients, and provide habitat when present.

Fish: Identification, Please. Cobb County conducts fish identification and release every five years in each of the four waste water plants’ service areas. Sampling follows the aforementioned Georgia protocol, and trained taxonomists identify the fish. Scores for each site are predicated on some of the following considerations concerning adaptability for different orders of fish.

Photo: Travis Neumeuller

Lanse Norris, Erin Feichtner, and Adam Sukenick assessing habitat

Mosquito fish and topminnows are Cyprinodontiformes, characterized by an upturned mouth and flattened head. They therefore swim just under the surface, feeding on fallen organisms and emerging adult insects. They can also take advantage of the oxygen-rich surface film in otherwise low-DO waters. The mosquito fish, Gambusia affinis, is tolerant of slow-moving, eutrophic (plant-nutrient-choked) waters and is thought to control malaria and possibly the West Nile virus borne by mosquitoes thriving in those conditions.

Minnows, shiners, suckers, and catfish belong to the super order Ostariophysi and occur extensively in all sizes of water bodies. Shiners and chubs in the family Cyprinidae can be specialized, requiring (and, therefore, good indicators of) desirable diverse habitat and macroinvertebrate populations.

Bass, sunfish, perch, and sculpins, the “percomorph” fishes, are found throughout Cobb County. Perch darters, in the family Percidae, of which the threatened Cherokee darter is a member, have adapted to use pectoral and pelvic fins like limbs as they stalk prey. The banded sculpin, Cottus carolinae, is particular about and a strong indicator of superior, rocky habitat and is “also reported to avoid lowland areas and turbid waters” (Wallus and Simon 2006).

Stream Monitoring personnel are trained in other disciplines relating to freshwater, including stream morphology and hydrology, riparian botany, ecology, soils, and construction erosion and sediment control measures.

Why Comprehensive Sampling?
“Water is a very good servant, but it is a cruel master.”—C.G.D. Roberts, Adrift in America, 1891

I could almost stop with this quotation, and some probably wish I would.

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Dave Rosgen (1996) says “A number of United States government agencies [including] the Environmental Protection Agency, USDA Forest Service, Natural Resources Conservation Service, US Army Corps of Engineers, and the Bureau of Land Management are engaged in a process of developing river design criteria and new management standards and guidelines related to resource values associated with rivers, riparian, and watershed areas.”

The short related answer for Cobb Water System Management is that, as regulations have evolved, the Cobb Stream Monitoring Program has covered, and indeed anticipated, new and more comprehensive regulations, including sampling aspects of Cobb’s Noonday Creek and other expanding wastewater reclamation facilities’ NPDES permits. Cobb’s program also supports Stormwater Management’s NPDES water-quality monitoring plan; NPDES fecal geometric mean sampling; MS4 Atlanta Metropolitan North Georgia Water Planning District biota sampling in HUC 12s; 303(d) list total maximum daily load (TMDL) sampling for metals, fecals, biota, and other parameters; as well as NPDES Phase I education requirements through Cobb Adopt-A-Stream. Stream Monitoring also supports Cobb Water System’s Capacity Management, Operation and Maintenance program sampling. Early in the history of the program, Stream Monitoring was instrumental in regulating, permitting, and closing some point sources discharging to waterways, and, in that way, dealt with its past as well as future. Next Page >

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