&EPA
www.epa.gov/ord
science in ACTION
BUILDING A SCIENTIFIC FOUNDATION FOR SOUND ENVIRONMENTAL DECISIONS
ECOLOGICAL
RESEARCH PROGRAM
RESTORED STREAMS ENHANCE ABILITY TO REMOVE NITROGEN
Issue:
Excess nitrogen from fertilizer,
septic tanks, animal feedlots, and
runoff from pavement can threaten
human and aquatic ecosystem
health. Degraded ecosystems like
those impacted by urbanization
have reduced ability to process
and remove excess nitrogen from
the environment. Restoring
ecological condition of streams
may be a cost-effective,
sustainable means to reduce
nitrogen pollution in watersheds.
Science Objective:
Scientists at the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency's Office of Research and
Development evaluated the effects
of stream restoration on nitrogen
removal capacity at an urban
stream undergoing intensive
restoration in Towson, Md.
Restoration of the stream was
completed in 2005 using various
techniques that reshaped the
stream banks and channel,
reconstructed natural stream
features, and re-established
riparian plants. Research began
before restoration and continued
afterwards to determine the effects
of restoration practices on nitrogen
removal.
Scientists found restored streams
more effectively removed nitrate
nitrogen than unrestored streams.
The total amount of nitrogen
removed in restored streams can
be significant and may help to
reduce the total nitrogen load
reaching water bodies of concern
like the Chesapeake Bay.
Application and Impact:
The research represents one of the
most intensive efforts to date to
quantify the effects of stream
restoration on nitrogen processing
in urban streams. Municipal
natural resource agencies such as
Baltimore County have used this
information to help develop
regional stream restoration
strategies to improve ecosystem
health and water quality. This
research also has contributed to
efforts by EPA's Chesapeake Bay
Program to model the effects of
stream restoration on Bay
ecosystem health. Results of this
ongoing research effort on stream
restoration continue to be used to
develop regional and national
approaches to implementing and
prioritizing stream restoration to
manage nitrogen in watersheds.
REFERENCES:
Helping streams help themselves, naturally.
Available at:
www.epa.gov/ord/sciencenews/scinews_helpin
g_streams.htm
Minebank Run restoration hits pay dirt in
reducing nitrogen loads. Chesapeake Bay
Journal. Oct. Vol. 17, Number 6.
Available at:
http://www.bayjournal. com/article. cfm?article=2
904)
Groffman, P.M.; Dorsey, A.M. and Mayer, P.M.
N processing within geomorphic structures in
urban streams. Journal of the North American
Benthological Society, 2005, 24:613-625.
CONTACT
Paul Mayer, Ph.D., ecologist, EPA's Office of
Research and Development. 580-436-8647,
maver.paul@epa.gov
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Research and Development
EPA/600/F-07/003
June 2007
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