1 / 20

Susan Cormier and Charles Lane Environmental Protection Agency Scott Neimela and Joel Chirhart, U.S. Minnesota Pollut

Eco-epidemiological Screening to. Design a Sampling Plan for TMDLs:. Susan Cormier and Charles Lane Environmental Protection Agency Scott Neimela and Joel Chirhart, U.S. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, U.S.A. Groundhouse River, Minnesota. Impetus for Causal Assessment.

shing
Download Presentation

Susan Cormier and Charles Lane Environmental Protection Agency Scott Neimela and Joel Chirhart, U.S. Minnesota Pollut

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Eco-epidemiological Screening to Design a Sampling Plan for TMDLs: Susan Cormier and Charles Lane Environmental Protection AgencyScott Neimela and Joel Chirhart, U.S. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, U.S.A. Groundhouse River, Minnesota

  2. Impetus for Causal Assessment • The Groundhouse River in central Minnesota did not meet minimum criteria for aquatic life uses. • Beneficial uses and was listed as impaired under Clean Water Act (CWA) Section 303(d).

  3. Groundhouse River, MN (474) Ogilvie Mechanical treatment plant - trickling filter/chlorine disinfection - continuous discharge - avg. annual design flow 200,000 gpd - violates CBOD and TSS limits with some frequency

  4. POTW Outfall

  5. Candidate Causes?

  6. Candidate Causes • Loss of suitable habitat from unstable or unsuitable substrates • Hypoxia associated with excessive nutrients • Altered food resources • Chronic or episodic toxic exposures

  7. Loss of suitable habitat from unstable or unsuitable substrates Co-occurrence Stressor-Response Causal Pathway Analysis

  8. Co-occurrence Stressor-Response Causal Pathway Hypoxia associated with excessive nutrients Analysis

  9. Altered food resources Co-occurrence Stressor-Response Causal Pathway Analysis

  10. Co-occurrence Stressor-Response Causal Pathway Chronic or episodic toxic exposures to ammonia Analysis

  11. Probable Cause Scoring Table

  12. Probable Cause Scoring Table

  13. Siltation resulting in Loss of Habitat • Physical Interaction: Evidence of increased siltation compared to upstream • Sequential Dependence: • Source of sediment • Factors that increase siltation • Sufficiency: Level of %fines reported to cause biological impairments

  14. Hypoxia associated with Nutrients • Physical Interaction: DO levels were greater at site 3 than upstream site 2 which was less impaired • Sequential Dependence: No point sources were found; e.g. combined sewer overflow • Sufficiency: Dissolved Oxygen levels were substantially higher than criteria

  15. Altered Food Resource • Physical Interaction: No algal growth observed within the study reach, although there was some growth downstream of the treatment plant outfall. • Physical Interaction: Allocthonous input, but no leaf packs • Sequential Dependence: • Sources of leaf input • No additional sources of nutrient input found (no CSO)

  16. Chronic or Episodic Toxicity • Physical Interaction: Ammonia levels were slightly greater at site than upstream site • Sequential Dependence: No known sources of other toxicants. Power line sprays herbicides not pesticides • Sufficiency: Ammonia levels orders of magnitude below acute and chronic toxicity values

  17. Outcome • Since the analysis was based on unreplicated observations obtained in different years, uncertainty was high. • Additional sampling was recommended with special attention: • to determining the boundaries of the biological impairment, • to characterizing natural sediment regimes, and • to developing exposure-response associations using state monitoring data.

More Related