1 / 28

Easter Lake / Yeader Creek Informational Meeting July 12, 2010

Easter Lake / Yeader Creek Informational Meeting July 12, 2010. Easter is a valuable lake. Outline. Easter Lake – Current Conditions Diagnostic Study Conditions from routine monitoring Diagnostic monitoring plan Project Goal – Restoration Feasibility Study

cachez
Télécharger la présentation

Easter Lake / Yeader Creek Informational Meeting July 12, 2010

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. Easter Lake / Yeader CreekInformational MeetingJuly 12, 2010

  2. Easter is a valuable lake

  3. Outline • Easter Lake – Current Conditions • Diagnostic Study • Conditions from routine monitoring • Diagnostic monitoring plan • Project Goal – Restoration Feasibility Study • Identify locally perceived problems and restoration goals

  4. Easter Lake

  5. Easter Lake and Watershed One of Iowa’s most urban lakes

  6. Easter Lake Physical Conditions

  7. Easter Lake: What do we know from monitoring data? Chemical Profiles

  8. Phosphorus • Long-term summer average for Iowa Lakes: 108 ppb • Surveys show “Swimmable”: less than 85 ppb • Easter Lake long-term summer average 68 ppb

  9. Suspended Solids Long-term average for all Iowa Lakes: 22 ppm “Swimmable”: less than 15 ppm Easter Lake: long-term summer average 13 ppm

  10. Chlorophyll-a Long-term average for all Iowa Lakes: 52 ppb “Swimmable lakes”: less than 20 ppb Easter Lake long-term summer average: 37 ppb

  11. Secchi Depth Transparency Long-term average for all Iowa Lakes: 3.9’ (1.2 m) “Swimmable”: more than 3-4.5’ (1-1.5m) Easter Lake long-term summer averages: 2’ 7” (0.8 m)

  12. Principal objective is to establish a water, nutrient, and material budget • Inputs • Tributaries • Storm drains • Precipitation • Outputs • Outfall • Evaporative loss (water not nutrients

  13. Diagnostic StudyLake Water Quality Monitoring and Assessment • What types of things are we finding out? • “Storage” term in budget mass-balance • Water column profile data Temperature, Dissolved Oxygen, pH, Conductivity, Turbidity • Nutrients Phosphorus, Nitrogen • Transparency Secchi disk, Particulates • Lake productivity and condition Chlorophyll a, TrophicState

  14. Diagnostic StudyWatershed Monitoring and Assessment • Hydrologic relationship of upstream and downstream waters • Tributary analyses YSI data, discharge, nutrients, bacteria • Real-time water level recording • Precipitation • Land use and land management alternatives (GIS) • Nutrient and sediment loading

  15. Tributary sampling sites (real-time flow monitors)

  16. Tributary analyses

  17. In-lake sampling sites

  18. In-lake analyses

  19. Storm drains

  20. Easter Lake storm drain sites

  21. Diagnostic StudyLake Habitat and Biological Monitoring and Assessment • Littoral zone habitat evaluation • Sub littoral benthic macro-invertebrates • Fisheries community IDNR data on abundance, age, and growth • Fish-flesh analyses Herbicides, Insecticides, PCB’s, Mercury • Plankton • Bacteria and Microcystin

  22. Diagnostic StudyLake Mapping and Sediment Monitoring and Assessment • Bathymetric mapping (sedimentation map) • Comparison of “as built” with current bathymetery • Sediment analyses • Insecticides, Herbicides, Heavy Metals

  23. Diagnostic StudyOther Information • Population assessment and history of lake use • Public access and comparison of lake use among other Iowa lakes • Economic cost vs. benefit analysis • Impact assessment of degradation and restoration • Point-source pollution inventory

  24. Restoration Feasibility Study • Past and current report summary • Lake restoration alternatives report • Impacts of lake degradation • Economic Cost / Benefit Analysis • Anticipated changes to aquatic biota • Monitoring program design • Assistance in public hearing process

  25. Example: phosphorus budget of Black Hawk LakeHigh nutrient concentrations derive 70-90% from activities high in the watershed but direct input around the lake shores is also detrimental

  26. Preliminary GIS (1” event) suggests lots of hot-spots

  27. What’s left to do • Sampling finished last fall • Calculate budgets based on hydrology and nutrient concentrations • Complete GIS assessments • Examine lake sediment deposition • Determine restoration target for acceptable water quality • Propose feasible options

  28. Iowa State UniversityEEOB Department • Website: http://limnology.eeob.iastate.edu • E-mail: “John Downing”downing@iastate.edu • Phone the lab: 515-294-6363 • Fax the lab: 515-294-1337

More Related