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Lower Wild Rice River Turbidity: TMDL Critique. Brent Mason, Mackenzie Consoer, Rebekah Perkins BBE 5543 November 8, 2011. Outline. TMDL Overview Watershed Background Water Quality Standards Loading Capacity Monitoring and Implementation Conclusion. TMDL Overview.
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Lower Wild Rice River Turbidity:TMDL Critique Brent Mason, Mackenzie Consoer, Rebekah Perkins BBE 5543 November 8, 2011
Outline • TMDL Overview • Watershed Background • Water Quality Standards • Loading Capacity • Monitoring and Implementation • Conclusion
TMDL Overview Clean Water Act Section 303 (d) requirements: • Every 2 years states publish a list of “impaired” waters • TMDL report must be developed for all waters on the impaired waters list TMDL Requirements: • Provides a calculation of the maximum amount of a pollutant that a water body can receive and still meet water quality standards • Sums the loads of a single pollutant from all point and non point sources
Watershed Background Wild Rice River watershed: • Encompasses just over 1 million acres • Flows Across 5 Minnesota counties • Lies within three eco-regions • Impaired for Turbidity from the confluence of the South Branch of the Wild Rice River to the Red River • Impaired section of River is 30.58 miles in length and is located entirely within Norman County.
Wild Rice River Watershed Characteristics • Lower reach of Wild Rice River lies within the Lake Plain from Glacial Lake Agassiz • Extremely Flat with level deposits of lake sediment • Lower Wild Rice River is contained by low banks and has high sinuosity • Soils tend to be clays with low permeability and low internal drainage • Cropland dominates the land use of the Lower Wild Rice River • Upland is heavily drained by both ditch and tile systems
Water Quality Standards Designated Beneficial Use: • Water body is classified as both 2B and 3B water • Chose class 2 waters: aquatic life and recreation **Higher standards Turbidity: • 25 NTU standard for natural water bodies • Surrogate measurement for Total Suspended Solids (TSS) and Suspended Sediment Concentration (SSC)
Turbidity Overview • Clarity of water • Caused by sediment, micro-organisms, dissolved material, and organic matter • Measurement of amount of light scattered • Measured with dimensionless unit of NTU • Blocks sunlight that fish and plants thrive on • Degrades aesthetic appeal of water body Fishschooled.blogspot.com Lenntech.com
Numeric Water Quality Target • Turbidity is dimensionless and cannot be used to determine sediment loads • Relationship between Turbidity and SSC needed to be derived • Using paired turbidity and SSC data, simple regression analysis was used to create a relationship between the two variables • Using this relationship: 25 NTU = 38 mg/L SSC
Turbidity vs. SSC Relationship • Majority of samples are at low flows and low turbidity • Limited amount of data
Major Assumptions • Major inconsistencies between turbidity meters • Turbidity relationship only based on one year of data and primarily at one location **Depending on how the make up of the sediment changes throughout this watershed, this relationship can vary greatly • The majority of the data was taken during low flows or winter months
-Only 2 sites -Underrepresented Low Flow Zone Loading Capacity: Duration Curve Approach
Point Sources: Wasteload Allocation TMDL = WLA + LA + MOS + RC • Four Identified Potential Sources: • 1. Municipal Wastewater Treatment Facilities (WWTFs) • 2. Construction Activities • 3. Industrial Facilities • 4. Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) • Note: No MS4 permit requirements (stormwater) • All Require NPDES/SDS permit • Assumed Full Permit Compliance • Minor contributors to turbidity impairment
Point Sources: Wasteload Allocation • Municipal Wastewater Treatment Facilities (WWTFs) • NPDES/SDS permit = 45 mg/l TSS • Assume TSS values comparable to SSC • Similar is stream with high fine material (Gray et al, 2000) • Lower Wild Rice ~90% fine material (Macek-Rowland and Dressler, 2002) • Seasonal Discharge Windows • April-June and Sept-Dec • Assumes coincides with High Flows 1.5 tons/day for each flow zone, except low flows
Low Flow Allocation Exception • Loading Capacity for LOW FLOW ZONE very small • Permitted WWTF loads exceed total daily loading at low flows **Not possible because it is a component of total loads • Concentration – based on allocation to sources for low flow zone • Allocation = (flow contribution from a given source) x (45 mg/L TSS, the permit limit)
Point Sources: Wasteload Allocation • Construction Activities • WLA=estimated % of disturbed land= 0.17% • MPCA stormwater permit records • Industrial Facilities • 2 located in watershed • No accessible acreage data • Assumed same as Construction Activities (0.17%) • Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) • 2 located in watershed • WLA=0 discharge, in accordance with permit Construction Activities + Industrial Facilities + CAFOs= .17% + .17% + 0% = 0.32% of TMDL within each Flow Zone
Non Point Sources: Load Allocation TMDL = WLA + LA + MOS + RC • No NPDES/SDS Permit Requirements • Major Load Contributors, occurs mostly at HIGH FLOWS • LA = Total Load Capacity-WLA-MOS • Primary Drivers in Wild Rice River Watershed • Upland Soil Erosion • Stream-Bank Erosion • Relative contributions? • Natural Processes magazine.noaa.gov
Margin of Safety TMDL = WLA + LA + MOS + RC • Margin of Safety (allocation uncertainty) • Four highest flow zones • Accounted for flow variability within each flow zone • Median flow-Minimum flow within each zone (standard calculation) • Low Flow Zone • Implicit MOS used (built into TMDL allocations) • Conservative assumptions • Discharge periods = High flows • Discharging below permit limits
Reserve Capacity TMDL = WLA + LA + MOS + RC • Reserve Capacity (future loading uncertainty) • Population Growth • 4/10 cities decline • 6/10 cities increase from 1.9% to 7.5% • WWTFs operating below loading limits, no planned expansion • RC = 0
Major Assumptions/Critiques • Flow Zone Sample Representation • NPDES/SDS permit compliance • Assume TSS values comparable to SSC • Seasonal Discharge Windows Coincide High Flow • Land Disturbance % = Loading Allocation % • Natural Background Insignificant • RC = 0
Wild Rice River Monitoring Plan Current Monitoring Activities • Red River Basin Watch • USGS flow monitoring and sediment analysis • MPCA milestone and condition monitoring Future Monitoring Plans • Future monitoring is being developed by the Wild Rice Watershed District with the assistance of its Flood Damage Reduction Team
Implementation Strategy Restoration Plan under development: • Focus of plan: Identify sources of sediment spatially • Funding for Implementation: Existing programs (Clean Water Legacy, Conservation Reserve Program, etc.) • Soil and Water Conservation District: Encourage the funding of programs that will reduce non point sources of turbidity
Tools to Achieve Reductions Best Management Practices (BMPs) • Filter Strips • Riparian Buffers • Grassed Waterways • Cover Crops • Conservation Tillage
Critique of Reduction Plan • Requires collaborative effort by many individuals and organizations • Assumes land use practices do not change significantly • Restoration costs are estimated to be in the tens of millions of dollars • Restoration tools suggested will occupy many acres of valuable farmland.
Conclusion • Turbidity and SSC were monitored • Numeric standard of 38 mg/L derived • Load duration curve developed to evaluate load exceedences • Monitoring and implementation plans being developed • Many assumptions were made but few assumptions had a significant impact on overall load calculations