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Phases 1 & 2
Michael Koryak, Chief Limnologist
and
Linda J. Stafford, Biologist
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Pittsburgh District
Aquatic macroinvertebrate communities
are sensitive indices of stream water quality and ecological health.
In the first phase of a three-year effort to conduct invertebrate-based
bioassessments of urban/suburban streams within Allegheny County,
Pennsylvania, chemical and invertebrate samples were collected
during the spring of 2001 at 35 stations on 33 different streams.
All of these stations were located near the mouths of streams
tributary to the navigation pools of Emsworth Locks and Dam, Monongahela
River Locks and Dam #2, and Monongahela River Locks and Dam #3.
Chemically, the study streams
tended to be alkaline, hard, and mineralized. The mean values
for pH, alkalinity, acidity, hardness, and conductivity were 7.79,
130.7 mg/l as CaCO3, 8.9 mg/l as CaCO3, 390.8 mg/l as CaCO3, and
1215 uhmos/cm, respectively. Calcium concentrations averaged 109
mg/l and sodium 100 mg/l. Concentrations of ammonia and metals
(especially iron and aluminum) were elevated at a number of stations.
These parameters are fingerprints of widespread influences of
alkaline mill slag leachates, highway deicing salts, and sewage
contamination, and, at some locations, acid mine drainage from
bituminous coal mines.
More than 15,000 invertebrate
organisms from 67 different taxa were collected, identified, and
enumerated at the 35 stations. Condition scores were then developed
from the invertebrate data for each station, where a score greater
than 80% indicates that a stream is non-impaired, 60-79% slightly
impaired, 40-59% moderately impaired, and less than 39% severely
impaired. All of the 35 stream stations examined were impaired
to various degrees; 42.8% severely impaired, 37.2% moderately
impaired, and 20% slightly impaired. While it is disappointing
that there were no streams without measurable degradation, it
is still encouraging that 20% of the streams examined were only
slightly impaired, and that 37.2% were moderately impaired. The
diversity of aquatic life found in these streams during the first
phase of the 3R-2N bioassessment exceeds what might have been
expected from historical memories and impressions of these urban
waterways as industrial waste conduits and/or open sewers. While
no attempt was made to collect fish, they were incidentally collected
during the invertebrate sampling at seven stations, and incidentally
observed at eleven other stations. The seven streams that were
only slightly impaired, and their condition scores, were: 1) Pine
Creek, 71.3%; 2) Mingo Creek, 66.2%; 3) Dry Run, 66.2%; 4) Sandy
Creek, 63.7%; 5) West Run, 62.0%; 6) Chartiers Creek, 61.3%; 7)
and Guyasuta Run, 60.0%.
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