News Release
How Healthy Are Our Rivers and Streams?
USGS Report Shows Complex Picture
America's rivers and streams are generally suitable for irrigation,
supplying drinking water, and home and recreational uses. However, in
areas with significant agricultural and urban development, the quality of
our nation's water resources has been degraded by contaminants such as
pesticides, nutrients, and gasoline-related compounds.
A series of 15 reports on the health of major river basins across the
country have been released by the USGS. The river basins are in Hawaii,
Alaska, California, Washington, Wyoming, Montana, Utah, Idaho, North
Dakota, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Illinois, Wisconsin, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Maine, New Hampshire,
Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Delaware,
Maryland, and Virginia. Findings of regional and national interest are
highlighted in a separate report "Water Quality in the Nation's Streams and
Aquifers-Overview of Selected Findings, 1991-2001."
For more than a decade, USGS hydrologists have looked at three questions
related to water quality. What are the conditions of our nation's streams
and ground water? How is water quality changing over time? And how do
natural features and human activities affect the quality of streams?
According to the USGS Chief Hydrologist Robert Hirsch, "By evaluating and
assessing our nation's water resources, we have a better understanding of
water quality and this gives us a comprehensive picture of the long-term
health of America's rivers and aquifers. We have analyzed the effects of
agricultural, urban, and forest land use practices on water quality,
habitat, and biota."
Major challenges that continue to affect streams and ground water are
sources of pesticides, nutrients, metals, gasoline-related compounds and
other contaminants. In urban areas, insecticides such as diazinon and
malathion which are commonly used on lawns and gardens were found in nearly
all of the streams that were sampled. Streams in agricultural areas were
more likely to contain herbicides-especially atrazine, metolachlor,
alachlor, and cyanazine.
Hirsch also noted that, "Concentrations of contaminants in water samples
from wells were almost always lower than current EPA drinking-water
standards and guidelines. However, the possible risk to people and to
aquatic life can only be partially addressed because of the lack of
criteria for many chemicals and their degradation or -breakdown- products.
In addition, criteria were developed for individual chemicals and do not
take into account exposure to mixtures or seasonal high pulses in
concentrations."
The detection of chemicals at low levels does not automatically translate
into impacts on human or aquatic health. For example, USGS water quality
assessments may be done at the parts-per- trillion levels, an amount that
can be up to 100 times lower than the threshold used for setting standards
and guidelines.
Other notable trends related to water-quality over the past decade are:
- Changes in land management practices can improve water quality in streams
over time. For example, changing from furrow to sprinkler and drip
irrigation in parts of Washington's Yakima River Basin has reduced runoff
from fields resulting in less sediment and compounds such as DDT in
streams. In fact, concentrations of total DDT in large-scale suckers,
smallmouth bass, and carp from the lower Yakima River decreased by about
half since the 1980's.
- Even low levels of urban development have an impact. In Anchorage, for
example, the abundance and diversity of aquatic insects became affected
when about five percent of a watershed was converted into areas like
parking lots.
- Natural features, such as soils, climate, and geology, are an important
influence on water quality in watersheds. For example, mercury
concentrations in fish are affected by the amount of wetlands and chemical
properties of soils and water, and therefore, fish in forested streams in
New England had higher levels of mercury than fish in the more urban
watersheds in the Boston metropolitan area.
- Contaminants can occur naturally, even in relatively pristine areas like
Wyoming and Montana's Yellowstone River Basin. Elevated phosphorus
concentrations were noted as derivatives from igneous and marine
sedimentary rocks. Elevated arsenic levels are most likely from
sedimentary rocks in contact with geothermal waters.
The reports on water quality were completed by the USGS National Water
Quality Assessment (NAWQA) program. Of the 51 areas studied in the first
phase of the program, the USGS has already launched a second round of
studies in 42 areas to determine trends, fill critical gaps in the
characterization of water-quality conditions, and increase understanding of
natural and human factors that affect water quality. Free copies of the
NAWQA reports are available from 1-888-ASK-USGS, by fax 303-202-4693 or
online at http://pubs.water.usgs.gov/nawqasum/.
The USGS serves the nation by providing reliable scientific information to
describe and understand the Earth; minimize loss of life and property from
natural disasters; manage water, biological, energy and mineral resources;
and enhance and protect our quality of life.
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