1 / 28

Envirothon 2014 Regional Practice: Aquatics

Envirothon 2014 Regional Practice: Aquatics. Nick Agins Resource Technician Lake County SWCD February 22, 2014. History of Water Quality Conservation. 45 years later. Point Source. Non-Point source. Pollution Types. Clean Water Act of 1972.

bono
Download Presentation

Envirothon 2014 Regional Practice: Aquatics

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. Envirothon 2014Regional Practice:Aquatics Nick Agins Resource Technician Lake County SWCD February 22, 2014

  2. History of Water Quality Conservation

  3. 45 years later

  4. Point Source Non-Point source Pollution Types

  5. Clean Water Act of 1972 • The Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1948. • What CWA 1972 Did: • Structure for regulating pollutants discharges into the waters of the USA. • Set water quality standards for all contaminants in surface waters. • Unlawful…to discharge any pollutant from a point source into navigable waters, unless a permit was obtained. (Agriculture Exempted) • Address the critical problems posed by nonpoint source pollution. • Water Quality Act 1987

  6. 2014 Envirothon

  7. Sustainable Agriculture and Locally Grown Products • Understanding how aquatic ecosystems function and the services they provide. • How sustainable farming practices enhance and protect…water quality and water quantity. • The importance of local and regional foods systems to sustainable agriculture. Fisheries Management

  8. Watersheds • Land that drains to a common outlet. • Everyone lives in a watershed. • Everything effects it

  9. Stream (Lotic) Systems • Arteries of a watershed • Lotic water system v. Lentic (ponds) • High biodiversity • Hundreds of species • Very sensitive and complex • Biological indicator of impact • Important to Commerce • Recreation and civil function

  10. River ContinuumConceptVannote et. al 1980 • Land use environment & stream community harmony. • 1o Producers: Vegetation • Riparian Habitat • Consumers: Macroinvertebrates • Shredders, Collectors, Grazers, Predators Fish • Fish spp. based on temp., food & spawning habitat.

  11. Lentic Systems • 1o Producers • Phytoplankton…….. • Tiny Plants • Consumers • Zooplankton & Fish

  12. Wetland Ecosystems • Act as filters in the natural world. • Sanctuary for endangered spp. • Essential for nursery habitat for animals. • Can be lotic or lentic systems.

  13. Pollution in Aquatic systems Sedimentation • Leading pollutant is…. • Clogs or fills streambed • Raises temperature • Smothers eggs and gills • Reduces oxygen • Changes hydrology • Hard to remove • Lead • Mercury • Arsenic • Excess Nutrients • Bieber

  14. How Could Agriculture Impact Streams, Wetlands and Lakes?

  15. Excess Nutrient Runoff • Fertilizer/waste entering into streams and ponds. • Lawn care, croplands, industrial effluent (phosphates) • Results….. or Eutrophication Algal Blooms

  16. N-P-K • All plants require to produce O2 • Nitrogen – N2 – Limiting in SOIL • Phosphorous – P – Limiting in WATER • Potassium – K • Nitrogen continues to assimilate in plants in the presence of available P. • Lakes act as P sinks. Algae dies off, sinks into bottom sediments and redistributed. • What Happens to D.O. as Eutrophication Progresses. Biological O2 Demand Increases (BOD)

  17. Nitrogen Cycle Legumes (Rhizobium ) BLG Algae Lightning

  18. Phosphorous Cycle Dissolved P Anaerobic Bacteria

  19. Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) • Blue Green Algal Taxa – Cyanobacteria Anabaena, Aphanizomenon, Microcystis • Photosynthetic Bacteria • Cyanobacteria microcystis • Microcystins are hepatotoxin • Liver, skin, hepatic portal system.. • Pose a threat to human/aquatic safety Annie Fannie Mike

  20. Sustainable Agriculture and Locally Grown Products Understanding how aquatic ecosystems function and the services they provide. How sustainable farming practices enhance and protect…water quality and water quantity. The importance of local and regional foods systems to sustainable agriculture.

  21. Agriculture Best Management Practices (BMPs) • Manage to Reduce and Retain • Animal Wastes • Nutrients/Soil • Salinity • Water use

  22. Animal Waste • Waste storage and lagoons • Compost facilities • Waste Utilization

  23. Nutrient Management • Regular soil tests • Nutrient Application Plan • Reduce over-application • Conservation tillage • Conservation, strip and no-till • Cover crops • Crop rotation (Rhizobium) • Grassed strips, wind breaks, contour farming

  24. Stream/Field Stewardship • Riparian Buffers • Non-point source protection • Bank stabilization • Temperature • Runoff velocity control • Hydrology • Slowed sufficiently • Nitrogen fixation • Trap sediment (P) • Wider the better

  25. Sustainable Agriculture and Locally Grown Products Understanding how aquatic ecosystems function and the services they provide. How sustainable farming practices enhance and protect…water quality and water quantity. The importance of local and regional foods systems to sustainable agriculture. Fisheries Management

  26. Maumee R. Watershed • 50% of TP in L.Erie is from 1 watershed • Maumee R. • 8,316 sq.mi; 24 counties over 3 states • 70%+ of watershed is Ag.

  27. Lake Erie Fisheries • Commercial and recreational economy • Consumable, popular commodity • 11 million people • Locally vital industry • 117,000 jobs • $3,100,000,000 in wages • $11,000,000,000 Revenue travel/sport fishing • 61% of commercial fishing harvest • $13,000,000+ Revenue

  28. Quiz

More Related