1 / 20

Watershed Watch Network

Watershed Watch Network. Danielle Donkersloot Volunteer Monitoring Coordinator. NJ Department of Environmental Protection. SUMMARY. NJ Watershed Watch Network Data Creditability “Tiered Approach” NJDEP Support of a Data Management System Standardizing Volunteers Collected Data

ecarlucci
Download Presentation

Watershed Watch Network

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. Watershed Watch Network Danielle Donkersloot Volunteer Monitoring Coordinator NJ Department of Environmental Protection

  2. SUMMARY • NJ Watershed Watch Network • Data Creditability “Tiered Approach” • NJDEP Support of a Data Management System • Standardizing Volunteers Collected Data • Benefits to the Volunteer Community • Benefits to NJDEP

  3. Watershed Watch Network • 29 River/Stream Monitoring Organizations • 58 Lake Monitoring Organizations

  4. WWN Advisory Council • NGO, Volunteer Monitoring Coordinators • Volunteers (paid and unpaid) • EPA Region 2 • Office of Quality Assurance • Monitoring and Standards Program • Division of Watershed Management • Delaware River Basin Commission • Others as needed

  5. The 4 Tiered Approach • Allows for volunteers to pick their level of monitoring involvement based on: • Intended purpose for monitoring • Intended data use • Intended data users

  6. Options for Involvement • Tier A: Environmental Education • Tier B: Stewardship • Tier C: Community Assessment • Tier D: Indicators/Regulatory Response

  7. Who Uses the Data in DEP? • Watershed Area Managers (TIERS B,C,D) • Water Assessment Team (TIER D) • NPS Program (TIER C, D) • 319 Program (TIER B, C, D) • TMDL Program (TIER B, C, D) • Other Programs or Divisions

  8. THE STATE’S MONITORING MATRIX NJ Water Monitoring & Assessment Strategy 2005-2014 Volunteer collected data is now integrated into the NJDEP Monitoring Matrix: • Stream Monitoring • Lake Monitoring • Monitoring of Tidal Rivers & Estuaries • Wetland Monitoring

  9. DATA, DATA, DATA Paper QAPP DEP Tiers? Study Design Study Design Schools electronic Volunteers

  10. Creating the Data Management System • NJDEP & Volunteer Community can Access All Available Data • Volunteer Data will be Standardized • Volunteer Data will be available Geo-spatially & in DataMiner

  11. Standardizing the Collection Methods of the Volunteer Community in NJ • Crosswalk of all volunteer program data sheets • chemical • biological • visual/habitat • general observations • Worked with volunteers coordinators & DEP to develop consistency

  12. Electronic Water Quality Monitoring Reporting Data Flow

  13. Volunteer Water Quality Monitoring Data Management System • Tie-in with National Initiatives • Quality Assurance • Project & Site Management • Assessment Report Options • Data Outputs (via Data Miner & NJEMS) • GIS Integration (via new version of iMAP)

  14. Tie-in w/ National Initiatives • EPA currently piloting new data reporting system to feed national system (STORET) • OWWQX (Office of Water - Water Quality eXchange) • Will be eventual way in which data is fed to EPA • Based on EPA data standards (ESAR) • EPA / USGS currently working to harmonize data exchange between STORET and NWIS using OWWQX format • E2-WQM Module uses enhanced OWWQX XML schema for reporting format • Includes NJ-specific fieldsnot captured in national standard

  15. Quality Assurance Project Plan Management • Each VM Project will be assigned a Tier • Electronic version of QAPP (or other similar Project Plan) can be uploaded to E2 • QAPP is then stored with the Project • QAPP can then be retrieved by Volunteer Monitoring Community or State by accessing online listing

  16. Reporting Options • General Monitoring Information • 3 Types of Reports are included: • Visual / Habitat Assessments • Biological (macroinvertebrate) Assessments • Chemical Assessments • Each submission can include photos & additional files

  17. Data Output Options Various data outputs being developed include: • Browse submission submitted data • Data Miner Reports/Graphs (once released) • Chemical values reported over time per site • Physical/meteorological parameters reported over time per site • Biological metric scores for multiple sites • Including whisker plots • Pie Chart showing reported macroinvertebrate breakdown for each assessment • iMap

  18. GIS Integration (iMAP) • In lieu of providing GPS coordinates, users can select coordinates from a map for: • Site Identification (single point or river reach) • Pipe inventory/location • Drainage Ditch Inventory/location • Volunteer monitoring group can store completed reports without “releasing publicly”. • Data can then be “released” • Then it is available on the State’s GIS application • Monitoring Groups to be able to see data reported from other groups (once released)

  19. The Real Test….. • Will the system be used by the VM community & DEP? • Will this be the “holy grail” of data management systems….? (Geoff Dates, 2005)

  20. Danielle Donkersloot 609-292-2113 danielle.donkersloot@dep.state.nj.us http://www.nj.gov/dep/watershedmgt/volunteer_monitoring.htm

More Related