Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

27
Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience Mike Staggs, WDNR Bureau of Fisheries Management and Habitat Protection Acknowledgements: Kristi Minihan, Russ Rasmussen, Jill Jonas, Mike Talbot, Bob Masnado, Mike Lemcke, Tim Simonson, Mike Miller, Brian Weigel, Ken Schreiber, Paul LaLiberte, Nancy Nate

description

Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience. Mike Staggs, WDNR Bureau of Fisheries Management and Habitat Protection - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Page 1: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin:Building on Experience

Mike Staggs, WDNR Bureau of Fisheries Management and Habitat Protection

Acknowledgements: Kristi Minihan, Russ Rasmussen, Jill Jonas, Mike Talbot, Bob Masnado, Mike Lemcke, Tim Simonson, Mike Miller, Brian Weigel, Ken Schreiber, Paul LaLiberte, Nancy Nate

Page 2: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Why Create an Integrated Strategy?

• Address Water Division Clean Water Act, Public Trust and Fisheries goals

• Need identified during “Waters of Wisconsin”

• Declining DNR funding and staffing

• Required by EPA for continued funding

• Basis for partner involvement

Page 3: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Challenges…..

• many opinions on what data should be collected

• monitoring programs can be very costly

• staffing and funding are limited

• aquatic ecosystems are highly variable

• there are many variables and taxa of interest

Page 4: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Collect data needed to answer necessary questions!

• clearly identify questions

• long term data sets

• statistically valid stratification and subsampling

• indicator species, habitats and metrics

• fundamental part of management program

• involve partners!

Page 5: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Comprehensive Management System

• set specific objectives with public input

• monitor whether meeting objectives

• diagnose problems

• implement management actions

• monitor results

Page 6: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Strategy Framework

• Tier 1: Statewide Baseline Monitoring

• Tier 2: Targeted Evaluation Monitoring

• Tier 3: Management Effectiveness &Compliance

Page 7: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring• Clean Water Act

– designate water uses– determine use attainment (305b report)– input for identifying impairments (303d list)– input for TMDL development– effluent limits– general responses to management actions

Page 8: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring• Public Trust

– develop environmental objectives– monitor impacts of permitting decisions at

the general water level

Page 9: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring• Fisheries

– develop quantitative management objectives for specific waters

– identify populations not meeting objectives– input for identifying problem causes– input for developing management

recommendations– general responses to management actions

Page 10: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring

• Wadeable Streams– 334 watersheds, 6 year rotation

Page 11: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring

• Wadeable Streams– 334 watersheds, 6 year rotation– large vs. small sites (500:140 sites/yr)– cold vs. warmwater sites (50%:50%)– fish sample at large sites– macroinvertebrate sample at small sites– habitat and water quality at selected sites– randomized sampling design

Page 12: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Wadeable Streams:4303 sites on 1734 streams

Page 13: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience
Page 14: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring

• NonWadeable Rivers – sampling schedule will cover all sites over time– Ambient water chemisty parameters at a rotational

subset of sites– E. coli sampling at subset of beach sites

Page 15: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Nonwadeable rivers:272 sites on 66 rivers

Page 16: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring• Lakes

– stratified sampling schedule– develop Floristic Quality Index for small lakes– increase sampling of small lakes– shift to satellite imagery for Trophic Status Index– maintain Self-Help Lakes volunteer program

Page 17: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Lakes:786 separate lakes

Page 18: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring• Ambient water quality assessment

– needed to support CWA goals & permitting– subset of baseline sites– parameters vary for lakes, rivers, and streams– evaluate existing river long term ambient water

quality network– E. coli added at priority beaches

Page 19: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 1: Baseline Monitoring• Groundwater

– Further implement statewide multi-agency strategy

• Other– Maintain existing flow gauging stations– Maintain current Great Lakes and treaty fisheries

monitoring– Continue development of wetland program

Page 20: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Tier 2: Targeted Evaluation• Work planned projects at targeted sites

– Impairments, TMDL, Sport and Commercial Fish Assessment, Contaminated Sediments

– Enforcement, Spills/Kills– Special Projects

Tier 3: Management Effectiveness/Compliance– assess effectiveness of management measures

implemented in Tier 2– permit compliance & assessment of permit limits

Page 21: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

WDNR Monitoring Team:

Water Division Monitoring Team

• Administrative team

• Sponsored by Bureau Directors

Subteams: Tech Staff

• Lakes

• Wadeable Streams

• Rivers

• Wetlands

• Groundwater

• Ambient Water Quality

• Citizen Monitoring

Page 22: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience
Page 23: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

How Citizens Fit in with Monitoring Strategy

• Limited DNR resources– Staff– Budget restraints

• Citizens somewhat untapped resource– Local network – Local knowledge– Informed advocacy

Page 24: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

How Citizen-based Monitoring is Incorporated

into the Strategy• Strategy provides framework for citizens’

work

• Citizen Monitoring Proposal is part of the strategy (Appendix A)– Incorporates all specific aspects of the

Strategy (e.g. water resource types, parameters to be monitored)

Page 25: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Basic Components of Citizen-based Monitoring

Proposal• Core Program Details

– Data uses– Training– Quality Assurance/Quality Control– Database Management

• Pilot Projects

• Long-Term Monitoring Options

Page 26: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Proposal Start-up

• Pilot projects– Family-level Aquatic Macroinvertebrate Biotic

Index– Basic Water Quality Suite

• Defines program structure, staffing needs, and resource allocations– Includes feedback and evaluation

• DNR / River Alliance partnership position

Page 27: Water Resources Monitoring Strategy for Wisconsin: Building on Experience

Long-Term Monitoring Options

• Defines a list of parameters citizens can monitor in the future

• Defines general implementation overview for these options

• Defines program structure, staffing needs, and resource allocations