WATERSHED

 A geographic region in which all the surface water flows toward a particular river or other body of water.  This geographic region is determined by topographical boundaries. As water flows over land or trickles through soils, it recharges surface and ground water. This process filters out impurities.  The concentration of these impurities, the speed and amount of water, materials the water flows over or through, and the grade of the land all contribute to the ability of a natural system to regenerate itself and maintain good water quality.  Human activity has taxed this process by altering land cover thus increasing concentrations of pollutants.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


NON-POINT SOURCE POLLUTION (NPS)

NPS or "people pollution" is  pollution  that we generate every day which is not discharged  directly into a waterway.  Every chemical or waste product that can be carried by rainfall into storm sewers and streams become part of NPS.  Common examples of NPS include fertilizers, herbicides, insecticides, spilled motor oil, and animal wastes from pets, wildlife, and farm animals.  Other significant sources include improperly operating septic systems, erosion from construction sites and plowed fields,  acid rain and runoffs from road ways, and road salting activities.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


CHEMICAL CONSTITUENTS

When referring to water quality, chemical constituents are primarily toxic or nutrient pollution.
Nutrient pollution is defined as the result of nutrient overloading.  Aquatic plants require nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus for growth, but too much of these nutrients can result in excessive growth of algae. An explosive growth of algae, termed an algal bloom, results in nutrient overloading.  In addition, an algal bloom will deplete the oxygen supply in the water as it decomposes.  Excessive nutrient pollution may be the result of waste water discharges, improperly functioning septic systems or storm water run off from agricultural and residential lands using pesticides or fertilizers.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


BIOLOGICAL CONSTITUENTS

When referring to water quality, biological constituents are primarily organic wastes.
Wastes containing organic material require oxygen to decompose.  Large accumulations of organic waste use large amounts of oxygen, leaving little oxygen for aquatic wildlife.  In addition, bacterial (coliform) levels from human or animal waste can make water unsafe for swimming.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 

 
 
 

 


LAND USE

The major land uses in the area of the water shed are agricultural, 46%, urbanized, 42%, wetlands / forested , 12%. The variation in land usage across a watershed area is directly related to the the major issues facing watershed quality. These major issues include increase in population, an issue which applies additional pressure to bodies of water with in the watershed. Development of new housing areas and commercial endeavors takes land away from  buffer zones necessary to protect streams and lakes from pollution sources. Leaky Septic systems can slowly discharge coliform and other organic material into the ground-which eventually ends up in the ground water  and surface water supplies. Pesticides and fertilizers threaten to contaminate surface and ground water within the watershed. Without a stream corridor or buffer zone, these excessive fertilizers and pesticides can run directly into waterways. To see individual maps of the discussed types of land use  and their correlation's to the test sites click on the appropriate land use type.

Agriculture
Urban
Wetlands
Forested
Environmentally Sensitive