fl  Chesapeake  Bay  Review:
                    Research  and  Responsibilities
                                  Volume
                                                       Ul Tnv/r
                                   Prepared For

                              The Chesapeake Bay Program
                                    Region III
                       United States Environmental Protection Agency
                                6th and Walnut Streets
                               Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
                                 Region III Library
                             Environmental Protection Agency
                                                        EPA Report Collection
                                                     Information Resource Center
                                                         US EPA Region 3
                                                       Philadelphia, PA 19107
                                                 THE  MITRE CORPORATION
SEPTEMBER  1976                                   METREK  DIVISION

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                                                     MITRE Technical Report
                                                     MTR-7344

                                                     Vol. I
                  fl  Chesapeake  Bay   Review:
                 Research  and  Responsibilities
THE:
 MITRE
                      D. BRITT         S. STRYKER
                      R. BROWN       S. TRACEY
                      J. SCHLESINGER   N. ZIMMERMAN
                      R. SPEWAK

                           SEPTEMBER 1976
     CONTRACT SPONSOR         U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
        CONTRACT NO.         68-01-3539
         PROJECT NO.         186C
              DEPT.         W-53
        MEXfliA&B£M                                This document was prepared for authorized distribution
        ni\/ISION                                ft haS n0t Deen aPProve^ for public release

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   Department Approval:.
MITRE Project Approval:.

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                             ABSTRACT
     This report was prepared for the staff of the Chesapeake Bay
Program, Region III, Environmental Protection Agency.  It describes
the major research activities, jurisdictional responsibilities,
studies, monitoring programs, and cooperative relationships which
relate to the water quality of the Chesapeake Bay.
                                iii

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                          TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.0  INTRODUCTION
1.1  Purpose of Report
1.2  Content of Report
1.3  Sources and Limitations of Information

2.0  FEDERAL AGENCIES
2.1  Introduction
2.2  Department of Commerce
2.3  Department of Defense
2.4  Energy Research and Development Administration
2.5  Environmental Protection Agency
2.6  Federal Council for Science and Technology
2.7  Department of Health, Education and Welfare
2.8  Department of the Interior
2.9  National Aeronautics and Space Administration
2.10 National Science Foundation
2.11 Department of Transportation
2.12 Smithsonian Institution

3.0  STATE AND REGIONAL AGENCIES
3.1  Introduction
3.2  Delaware
3.3  District of Columbia
3.4  Maryland
3.5  Pennsylvania
3.6  Virginia
3.7  West Virginia

4.0  ACADEMIC INSTITUTIONS
4.1  Introduction
4.2  University of Delaware
4.3  Johns Hopkins University
4.4  University of Maryland
4.5  Old Dominion University
4.6  United States Naval Academy
4.7  University of Virginia
4.8  Virginia Institute of Marine Science
4.9  Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
4.10 College of William and Mary

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                           TABLE OF CONTENTS
                              (Continued)
 5.0  OTHER AGENCIES OR INSTITUTIONS                               5-1
 5.1  Introduction                                                 5-1
 5.2  Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin             5-1
 5.3  Susquehanna River Basin Commission                           5-2
 5.4  Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission                  5-4
 5.5  Potomac River Fisheries Commission                           5-5
 5.6  Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated                 5-5
 5.7  Marine Science Consortium                                    5-6

 6.0  MAJOR STUDIES ON THE BAY                                     6-1
 6.1  Introduction                                                 6-1
 6.2  Major Studies                                                6-1

 7.0  MONITORING OF THE BAY                                        7-1
 7.1  Introduction                                                 7-1
 7.2  Monitoring Activities                                        7-1

 8.0  COOPERATIVE RELATIONSHIPS                                    8-1

 9.0  SIMILAR RESEARCH - MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS                       9-1
 9.1  Introduction                                                 9-1
 9.2  Long Island Sound Management Study                           9-1
 9.3  San Francisco Bay-Delta Plans                                9-2
 9.4  The Management of Great South Bay                            9-4
 9.5  New York Bight                                               9-5

10.0  ACRONYMS AND INITIALISMS                                    10-1

11.0  LITERATURE CITED                                            11-1
APPENDIX I  MAJOR MONITORING PROGRAMS                              1-1

APPENDIX II  COOPERATIVE RELATIONSHIPS                            II-l

APPENDIX III  PROBLEMS AND RECOMMENDATIONS                       I II-l
                                  vi

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                      LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Figure Number

     2.1



     3.1



     3.2
Organization of Corps of Engineers
District Offices Located in the
Chesapeake Bay Basin

Relationship of Maryland Agencies
Concerned With Water Resources in
the Chesapeake Bay Basin

Relationship of Virginia Agencies
Concerned with Water Resources in the
Chesapeake Bay Basin
                                         Page
2-14
3-6
                                                            3-21
Table Number

     1.1


     2.1


     6.1


     I.I

     1.2

     1.3

     III.l



     III.2
        LIST OF TABLES

                                         Page

A Categorical Index to Volume I By
Research Topics                           1-3

Data Files Relating to the Chesapeake
Bay and Environs                          2-11

Summary of Reports Related to the
Water Quality of the Chesapeake Bay       6-4

Index to Monitoring Programs              1-2

Nature of Materials Monitored             1-7

Summary of Major Monitoring Activities    1-9

How Important Are the Following Items
to the Chesapeake Bay and its Users?
(Shabman and Ashton, 1976)              III-9

How Important Are the Following Items
to the Chesapeake Bay and its Users?
(Shabman and Ashton, 1976)              111-12
                                vii

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1.0  INTRODUCTION




1.1  Purpose of Report




     This report was prepared under contract with the Environmental




Protection Agency and is designed to serve as a source of information




useful to the Agency's Chesapeake Bay Program.  The primary goal of




the Program will be to develop a management system which is designed




to maintain and improve the overall water quality of the Chesapeake




Bay.  The Program will emphasize the coordination of existing Bay




programs being conducted by current planning and regulatory agencies




and will focus on the impacts of nutrients, toxic substances, non-




point source pollution, physical alterations, the causes of problems




associated with the impacts, and the existing institutions, policies,




and regulations which relate to these areas.  The purpose of this




report is to identify and to summarize the ongoing activities of the




major institutions and agencies in the Bay area, especially with




respect to the problem areas of primary interest to the Chesapeake




Bay Program.  This report will be utilized by the staff of the




Chesapeake Bay Program to pull together information relevant to on-




going activities which will be useful to the development of a




coordinated management program for the Bay.




1.2  Content of Report




     This volume contains a description of the major research




activities, jurisdictional responsibilities, studies, monitoring




activities, and cooperative relationships which pertain to the






                                 1-1

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water quality of the Chesapeake Bay.   Within this report, at least




eleven federal departments and forty-five state and regional agencies




are described.  Monitoring activities are described for fifty-one




monitoring programs representing over thirteen thousand sampling




stations where some of over fifty parameters are measured.




     A description of the activities of federal agencies and state/




regional agencies is presented in Section 2.0 and 3.0, respectively




in this volume of the report.  The activities of academic institutions




and other agencies are described in Section 4.0 and 5.0.  Section 6.0




summarizes recent studies or reports on the Bay.  Section 7.0,




together with Appendix I, presents an overview of the major monitoring




programs being carried out on the Bay and its tributaries.  Section




8.0 and Appendix II depict more-or-less formal arrangements whereby




agencies interact to promote coordination with respect to activities




relating to the Bay.  Section 9.0 identifies research and management




programs on similar bodies of water which may be useful as models




for the development of a management program for the Bay.  Appendix III




is a listing of comments and recommendations received from adminis-




trators and researchers interviewed during the course of this study




and which may be useful to the development of a responsive management




program.  Table 1.1 of this Section is a categorical index by page




number to the four problem areas of interest to the Chesapeake Bay




Program and broken down according to various sections of this report




relating to current activities or studies performed on the Bay.






                                 1-2

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1.3  Sources and Limitations of Information




     The information contained within was obtained largely from repre-




sentatives of various agencies or institutions in the Chesapeake




Bay area during personal or telephone interviews conducted in the




course of this study.  This report is not intended to provide defini-




tive information with regard to every agency or institutional activity




with respect to the Bay.  Rather, it is intended to provide an overall




perspective and a summary of the activities of agencies and institu-




tions with a jurisdictorial responsibility or active interest in the




quality of the Bay.
                                 1-5

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2.0  FEDERAL AGENCIES



2.1  Introduction




     Many federal agencies are active in research, planning,




surveillance, and enforcement activities in the Chesapeake Bay Basin.




Although not usually known for their efforts to protect the water




quality of the Bay, federal governmental units such as the Department




of Agriculture (acting through the Soil Conservation Service and




cooperative arrangements with state conservationist officials)




promote the soil conservation practices of contour farming, use of




sod waterways, terracing, and various land use policies which in




effect hinder or prevent the movement of fine particulates from




eroded soils into the Bay or its tributary estuaries.




     Through the activities of fisheries research, tidal and meteor-




logical monitoring, coastal zone management, data inventories,




mapping, and the issuance of contracts under the Sea Grant Program,




the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) represents




the federal agency having the most diverse programmatic efforts with




respect to the Bay.  The responsibility for the enforcement of marine




law on the Bay lies with the United States Coast Guard.  The Environ-




mental Protection Agency conducts surveillance and enforcement acti-




vities in the Bay Basin in support of regulations issued under the




Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 (PL 92-500).




To date the Corps of Engineers has been the lead Federal agency with




respect to the support of a unified and comprehensive approach to the
                                 2-1

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understanding of the economic, demographic, land and resource




development trends within the Basin, and of the vitality of the Bay




and its tributary estuaries.   This section describes the salient acti-




vities of these and other federal agencies as they relate to the




Chesapeake Bay.






2.2  Department of Commerce




     Although having an indirect influence upon the Chesapeake Bay




through the Economic Development Administration and the Maritime




Administration, the Department of Commerce supports major planning




efforts and research activities through the Department's National




Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).   The following is a




description of NOAA's activities with respect to the Chesapeake Bay.



     The National Marine Fisheries Service conducts research on the




life history, population dynamics, and various factors influencing




the growth, survival, and distribution of marine mammals, fish, and




shellfish and promotes the development and marketing of fisheries




products.  The Service maintains an extensive library on marine sport




fish and fisheries at its Middle Atlantic Coastal Fisheries Center,




Sandy Hook Laboratory, Highlands, New Jersey.  The major subjects




covered in over 4,000 volumes and 14,000 reprints include marine




biology, oceanography, conservation, marine pollution, and the fish-




eries of coastal estuaries, and near shore areas.




     In cooperation with the Fisheries Administration of the Maryland




Department of National Resources, the National Marine Fisheries Ser-






                                2-2

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vice jointly funded a comprehensive survey of anadromous fish (fish




which migrate upstream from saline waters to breed) spawning areas




in the Potomac River and upper Chesapeake Bay drainage basins.  The




survey was conducted over the period July 1970 - January 1975 as part




of Maryland's Anadromous Fish Stream Survey Program.  The findings




of this study are presented in Section 6 of this volume.




     The Service maintains a research laboratory in Oxford, Maryland.





Recent studies have centered on the development of neoplasms in the




Baltic clam (Macoma balthica), an abundant filter feeding organism




in the Chesapeake Bay.  Several locations within the Bay have been




sampled for the occurrence of neoplasms in the clams.  Studies also




have centered on the parasites and diseases of Rangia cuneata,




a brackish water clam common in areas within the Bay characterized




by low salinity.  Other studies at the laboratory involved hysto-




logical analyses on striped bass and oyster ova, and the develop-




ment of a mariculture system.




     As part of a Menhaden Catch Sampling Program conducted by the




Atlantic Estuarine Fisheries center of the National Marine Fisheries



Service, menhaden are sampled during a five-day period throughout the




annual fishing season at two processing plants located in Reedville,




Virginia.   The program involves the estimate of population size and




the length, weight, and age relationships for the species.




     The National Marine Fisheries Service, in cooperation with the




Environmental Protection Agency, has supported a National Estuarine





                                 2-3

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Monitoring Program initiated at VIMS during 1965.   During the period
1965-1972, oysters and other shellfish were collected from various
areas of the upper Chesapeake Bay and from the James, York, Rappahan-
nock, and Elizabeth Rivers and analyzed for pesticides.  Residues of
DDT were observed to be as high as 0.070 ppm in Maryland and 0.68 ppm
in Virginia.  However, in both states most oyster samples contained
DDT levels in the 0.011 to 0.100 range (Munson and Huggett, 1972).
Subsequent to 1972 until June of this year, the Program has been con-
ducted under the aegis of the Environmental Protection Agency wherein
yearling fish have been sampled at six month intervals in as many as
11 tributaries to the Chesapeake Bay (see Appendix - "Major Monitor-
ing Programs").
     The National Ocean Survey conducts an extensive program of
monitoring with respect to tidal currents, heights, and time of
occurrence.  The Survey played a major role in the gathering of
basic data for use in the development and construction of the Corps
of Engineers, Chesapeake Bay Hydraulic Model.
     For various studies, the Survey moors buoys at strategic loca-
tions where data collected on salinity, temperature, and currents are
telemetered to a shore-based station.  The National Ocean Survey con-
tributed most of the data recorded for Maryland's baseline survey of
the Chester River (funded jointly by Westinghouse Electric Corporation
and the State of Maryland).  The National Ocean Survey retains exten-
sive archival data on the Chesapeake Bay at its office in Rockville,
Maryland.
                                 2-4

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     The National Weather Service maintains two meteorological mon-

itoring and observer stations in the Bay area and three automated

stations.  The collected data are utilized in forecasts of weather

conditions over the Bay.  Extensive data files relevant to meteorol-

ogical conditions in the Bay area are stored and available through

the Environmental Data Service of NOAA.


     Predictions of freshwater flow into the Bay are available from

the National Weather Service River Forecast Center at Harrisburg,

Pennsylvania.   The Center is responsible for predicting flows of

coastal rivers from the James River to the Hudson River.   At present,

short-range predictions of only a few days are available,  however,

Longer range predictions expressed in terms of probability can be made

available upon request.

     The Office of Coastal Zone Management of NOAA promotes effective

protection and use of the land and water resources of the  coastal

zone through administration of the Coastal Zone Management Act of

1972.   The Office enters into the planning process,

     "when a state or territory decides to develop a coastal
      zone management plan and applies for a federal grant
      under Section 305—a strictly voluntary action based on
      a decision by the Governor.  The state must be able  to
      provide funds or services to match by one-half the total
      of the federal grant it requests (so that the effort
      is funded on a two-thirds federal, one-third state basis).

           The Governor must designate a state agency respon-
      sible for administering the grant and completing the
      work plan.  The grant application describes the respon-
      sibilities of that agency and all other state agencies
      involved; the status of coastal zone management acti-
      vities;  data sources and needs; state goals, problems

                                 2-5

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      and priorities;  means  for  involving  the  public and
      various  levels  of  government  in  plan development;  means
      of coordinating plan development with agencies admin-
      istering excluded  federal  coastal  lands;  and the
      strategy to  be  pursued in  developing the management
      plan and program."*

      With regard  to  the implementation of the management program,

a state may apply  for and receive as many  as

     "three annual Section 305 planning, or program develop-
      ment, grants.  During  this time, the state program
      would be developing consistent with  federal guidelines
      which are designed to  prepare the state  to request and
      receive  federal approval of its management plan—and
      federal  grants  to  implement it.

          Central  to  this goal are six items the state must
      address  in its  planning program:

          (1)   identification of the boundaries of the coa-
      stal zone;

          (2)   an  inventory  and designation of areas of
      particular concern;

          (3)   broad  guidelines on priority of uses in
      particular areas including specifically  those uses of
      lowest priority;

          (A)   a determination of permissible  land and water
      uses which have a  direct and significant impact on
      coastal  waters;

          (5)   the means by  which the  state proposes to con-
      trol those uses; and

          (6)   the organizational structure which would
      implement the management program.
* Source:  Office of Coastal Zone Management.  1975.  "Considering
           Coastal Zone Management.  The Law.  The Participants.
           The Program."  National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis-
           tration, U. S. Department of Commerce, Washington D.C.
                                 2-6

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    The Act specifies three optional types of controls:
 (1) direct state regulation; (2) local regulation con-
 sistent with state established standards; or, (3) local
 regulation subject to state review.

    When the state program is developed, federal appro-
 val may be sought from the Secretary of Commerce.  He
 judges whether the management process the state has
 developed meets the general goals of the Act.  The pur-
 suit of federal approval is again a voluntary action by
 the state.  To secure federal approval, the Governor
 must have approved the program and the state must have
 developed the powers, arrangements and authorities
necessary to implement it.  This is encouraged through
 Section 306 program implementation grants.  Substanti-
 ally more funds are authorized by the Act for the annual
 implementation grants it allows.  The state must again
match the total federal grant it requests by one-half.

    Authorized by Section 312 of the Act, an estuarine
 sanctuary grant is made on a 50% - 50% matching basis.
 It enables a state to acquire estuarine water bodies
 and adjacent waters, wetlands and uplands and to oper-
ate and maintain that area for education and research
 in support of its coastal management efforts.

    Sanctuaries will be selected throughout the nation.
Areas selected are to be representative of the nation's
various ecosystem types, rather than being unique
ecological areas.

    Criteria used in selection are based on ecological
characteristics, size and selection of boundaries, cost,
enhancement of non-competitive uses, proximity and
access to existing research facilities, availability of
suitable alternative sites already protected, and con-
flict with existing or potential competing uses in the
area or nearby.

    Some marine areas merit preservation or restoration
for their conservation, recreational, ecological or
esthetic values.  Congress recognized this in Title III
of the Marine Protection, Research & Sanctuaries Act of
1972 (Public Law 92-532; enacted October 23, 1972).

    That Act provides that any individual, organization,
state or federal agency may nominate an area to be
designated a marine sanctuary.   This area would be

                           2-7

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      acquired and operated with full federal funding (where
      funding is necessary), and could be managed in a variety
      of ways through agreements with various federal or
      state agencies.

          Marine sanctuaries may be established in ocean
      waters as far seaward as the outer edge of the conti-
      nental shelf in coastal waters where the tide ebbs and
      flows; and in the Great Lakes and their connecting
      waters.
          The marine sanctuaries program, administered by the
      Office of Coastal Zone Management, is coordinated closely
      with the coastal management program.  For both sanctu-
      aries programs, a public hearing process is called for
      after nomination and prior to designation."*

      The lead state agencies for coastal zone management contracts

in the Chesapeake Bay area are the Energy and Coastal Zone Administra-

tion of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, and the office

of the Virginia Coastal Zone Management Program, Office of the Secre-

tary of Commerce and Resources.  Discussion relevant to the status

of involvement of these States within the coastal zone management

program is given with the presentation of the responsibilities of

the appropriate state agency.

     The National Oceanographic Data Center of NOAA's Environmental

Data Service maintains the Environmental Data Base Directory (EDBD).

The EDBD is a computerized inventory of environmental data bases

located at federal, state, and local government agencies, educational

and research institutions, and private industry in the U.S. and Canada.
*  Source:  Office of Coastal Zone Management.  1975.  "Considering
            Coastal Zone Management.  The Law.  The Participants.  The
            Program."  National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
            U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington D.C.
                                  2-8

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At present, 3500 environmental data files are described.  These per-
tain largely to Great Lakes and coastal areas of the U.S.  A goal is
to complete a comprehensive nationwide inventory by 1980.
    Each environmental data base description (a characterization
of a data file or unbroken series of collected  data) lists the
geographic area of data collection, types of data parameters and
methods used to measure them, when and where the data were collected,
the sensors and platforms used, data formats, restrictions on data
availability, publications in which the data may be found, whom to
contact for further information, and the estimated cost of obtain-
ing the data.  This inventory is searchable interactively on any of
the items listed above.  Search results can be tailored to the user's
needs.
    In order to catalog and to determine the extent of such data
files for the Chesapeake Bay, the Environmental Data Service has
contracted with the Virginia Institute of Marine Science for the
periodic updating and expansion of an environmental data index to
data files on the Bay.  This index or directory may be obtained
by querying the entire data file of the Environmental Data Service
with respect to the existence of data files for the Bay.  The out-
put is a listing and description of each data file.  A search of the
data base conducted for this report revealed the existence of 1,182
data files pertinent to the Chesapeake Bay area (Environmental Data
Service, 1976).  The listing is not complete (lacking EPA data files,
Tri-County Council for Southern Maryland, etc.), but represents a
                                 2-9

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comprehensive directory of the various kinds and sizes of data files




on the Bay.  A breakdown of the number of data files for each type




of data storage is presented in Table 2-1.




     Each data file represents a certain amount of sampling or monitor-




 ing effort.  The collected data often are not readily compatible




 with rapid information retrieval unless stored on punched standard




 80 column Hollerith cards or on digital magnetic tape.




     Most of these automated data files are located at the Virginia




 Institute of Marine Science.  Of these, the following four are exam-




 ples of the type of surveys for which the data exist on magnetic




 digital tape:




      1.  Monitoring data of temperature and salinity from 1972




          to the present.  Values measured every 30 minutes




          (March to November) at two Rappahannock River stations.




      2.  Current speed and direction measurements every twenty




          minutes for five-day periods at about 100 stations in




          the lower Chesapeake Bay and its tributary estuaries




          (March - September 1973).




      3.  Current speed and direction measurements every twenty




          minutes in the Rappahannock River and Mobjack Bay




          (May - August 1970).




      4.  Current speed and direction  measurements every twenty




          minutes at 25 stations in the lower Bay (June - August




          1972).






                                 2-10

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                                 TABLE   2.1
          DATA FILES RELATING TO THE CHESAPEAKE BAY AND ENVIRONS
   Number of
   Data Files
                 Type of Storage
          4
        296

          1
         17
          2
         62
          7
         22
        161

         76
        502

          8

         13
          4
      1,182
Charts (Map or atlas)
Data Sheets (Local or standard data forms manually recorded
  and stored in files)
FOSDIC Film (Film sensing device for input into a computer)
Magnetic Disc
Magnetic Tape Analog  (Any kind of analog magnetic tape)
Magnetic Tape Digital (Standard 1/2 inch computer compat-
  ible tapes)
Microfiche (Sheet of microfilm containing multiple micro-
  images in a grid pattern)
Microfilm (16 min or  35 mm, cartridge or reel)
Original film (Analog data stored on film)
Photoprints (Any photoprint system for storage of analog
  data)
Punched Cards (Standard 80 column Hollerith cards)
Reports (Data stored  in printed form such as books, data
  reports, pamphlets)
Samples (Any samples  of the environment available for
  study, this includes reference collections)
Strip Charts (All recorder produced analog records)
X-Y Plots (Graphic plots shown on Cartesian coordinates)
SOURCE:  Environmental Data Service, 1976.
                                     2-11

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     The Institute retains 47 data files on punched cards.   Forty-




six of these are results of biological sampling efforts.   Of these




8 represent the results of continuous collecting efforts  (striped




bass, 1967, 1968, and 1972 to present; benthic fauna,  1972 - present;




rock crabs, 1970 - present; anadromous fishes 1966, 1967,  and 1967




to present).  The non-biological monitoring study dealt with exten-




sive nutrient sampling of Virginia estuaries during July  1967 - June




1970.




     Automated data files exist at 30 other agencies and  institutions,




Many of these files represent collected data from biological surveys.




A few represent continuous physical or chemical monitoring data




through the present.   A copy of the listing of the 1,182  Chesapeake




Bay data files is available for study at the EPA - Region III head-




quarters in Philadelphia, Chesapeake Bay Program Office.




     The Environmental Data Service also maintains an information




retrieval system termed OASIS (Oceanic and Scientific Information




System) which provides a reference to published technical literature




in the areas of chemistry and biology.  The system services include




retrospective searches as well as providing the selective dissemina-




tion of information or current awareness citations on a periodic




basis.




     NOAA also provides other services useful to activities in the




Chesapeake Bay Basin including the preparation of nautical charts,




nautical publications  (tide tables, bench marks, current  charts),
                                 2-12

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bathmetric maps, coastal mapping, geodetic surveys, hydrographic sur-




veys, and aeronautical charts.  NOAA also administrates the National




Sea Grant Program established by NOAA to provide grants to colleges,




universities, and other research institutions for programs and pro-




jects to develop and conserve marine resources.  The academic




institutions within the Chesapeake Bay area which have received grants




under the Program include the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and




State University, the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, the Uni-




versity of Delaware, and the University of Maryland.




2.3  Department of Defense




    To date the United States Army Corps of Engineers, of the




Department of Defense, has been the lead federal agency with respect




to the development of a unified and comprehensive approach to the



understanding of the economic, demographic, land and resource develop-




ment trends within the Basin, and of the vitality of the Bay and its




tributary estuaries.  As for research in other areas, the Corps of




Engineers conducts research studies on impact assessment,




management and conservation of ecosystems, engineering construction




to control the environment, and industrial siting.  Methods are




developed for the control of aquatic weeds, waste disposal, and man-




agement of pollution associated with dredging, bulkheading, and




other physical alterations  (see structure of Bay Offices - Figure 2.1).




     The Army Corps of Engineers permit responsibilities are primarily




contained within the following enactments:  The River and Harbor Acts



                                 2-13

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2-14

-------
of 1899, 1902, and 1965; The Federal Power  Act of 1920; The Fish and

Wildlife Coordination Act of 1956; The Water Resources Planning Act

of 1965; The National Historic Preservation Act of 1966; The Estuary

Protection Act of 1968; The National Environmental Policy Act of

1969; The Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972;

The Marine Protection and Sanctuaries Act of 1972; and The Coastal

Zone Management Act of 1972.

    A major responsibility of the Corps relates to the granting or

denial of permit applications for physical alterations in navigable

waters.  In this regard, any individual, firm or agency who plans to

build a structure in, on, under or over a navigable waterway in the

United States must obtain a permit from the Corps.  If a body of water

is considered navigable, its entire surface falls under federal per-

mit authority, including adjacent wetlands, even though wetlands can-

not support watercraft uses.  With this respect, permits must be

obtained for any work in bays, estuaries, or wetlands which are sub-

ject to tidal action.

    With respect to the Chesapeake Bay, the Corps authority to con-

duct its Chesapeake Bay Study and to construct a hydraulic model of

the Bay is contained in Section 312 of the River and Harbor Act of

1965:

               The Secretary of the Army, acting through the
          Chief of Engineers, is  authorized and directed to
          make a complete investigation and study of water
          utilization and control of the Chesapeake Bay Basin,
          including the waters of the Baltimore Harbor and
          including, but not limited to, the following:

                                2-15

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            navigation, fisheries,  flood control,  control of
            noxious weeds, water pollution,  water  quality
            control, beach erosion,  and recreation.   In order
            to carry out the purposes of this section,  the
            Secretary, acting through the Chief of Engineers,
            shall construct, operate, and maintain in the State
            of Maryland a hydraulic model of the Chesapeake Bay
            Basin and associated technical center.   Such model
            and center may be utilized, subject to such terms
            and conditions as the Secretary  deems  necessary,
            by any department, agency,  or instrumentality of
            the Federal Government  or of the States  of  Maryland,
            Virginia, and Pennsylvania, in connection with any
            research, investigation, or study being  carried
            on by them of any aspect of the  Chesapeake  Bay
            Basin.  The study authorized by  this section shall
            be given priority."

As a result of Tropical Storm Agnes, which caused extensive damage

within the Chesapeake Bay, the Supplemental  Appropriation Act of 1973,

Public Law 92-607, provided for an additional study relating to the

impact of the storm on the Bay.  Most of this study was subcontracted

to the Chesapeake Bay Consortium.  The results are summarized in Sec-

tion 6 of this volume.

    At the present time, Phase I of the study has been completed and

culminated in a seven volume study of existing conditions.  The

report does not include the entire drainage area for the Bay.  Cover-

age is very close to that of the study area for Maryland and Virginia's

Coastal Zone Management Programs, i.e.  to counties adjacent to the

Bay and its tributaries.

    Phase II should be completed by the end of 1976.  It will consist

of 15 volumes on the future conditions of the Bay.  The report will

project future resource needs and problem areas within the Chesapeake
                                2-16

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Bay Basin and will include recommendations for future studies and

model testing required to establish a management program for the Bay.

    The present direction of the Corps' Chesapeake Bay Program is to

concentrate on the beneficial uses of the Hydraulic Model.

    After the Model is calibrated (scheduled for completion in the

spring of 1977), a few projects (perhaps three) may be funded the first

year.  At present, the initial tests to be conducted include (Corps

of Engineers, 1976):

     1.  Low Freshwater Inflow Test to determine the impact on the
         Bay of either natural or man-made reductions in the amount
         of freshwater entering the Bay.

     2.  Baltimore Harbor Test to determine the effects of deepening
         the Baltimore Harbor and channel to 50 feet.

     3.  Potomac Estuary Test to study water supply and waste water
         disposal in the Potomac Estuary.

Although the Model would be useful in identifying impacts due to

construction activities and point source discharges in the Bay,  the

Model lacks the "quick response"  needed for this kind of use, i.e.,

the projects for which the Model  will be used need to be designated

a year or more ahead of time, and the Corps would hesitate "bumping"

a designated project for a quick  study such as an environmental

assessment of a local or temporary problem.

2.4  Energy Research and Development Administration

     Established by the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, the Energy

Research and Development Administration (ERDA) was formed by the

assembly of energy related programs of the Atomic Energy Commission
                                2-17

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(no longer in existence),  the Department of the Interior,  the National




Science Foundation, and the Environmental Protection Agency.




     Within the Chesapeake Bay area,  ERDA has funded studies  initi-




ated by the former Atomic  Energy Commission.   Many involve coopera-




tive support provided by other agencies such as the National  Science




Foundation and the Office  of Naval Research.   Many of these studies




relate to the uptake and release of phosphorus in the Bay, the rela-




tionship between the concentration of plant pigments and the  amount




of light reaching intertidal sediments, the cycling of nitrogen and




phosphorus in open waters  of the Bay, and the distribution of the




dominant predaceous cladoceran (a planktonic organism) Podon  poly-




phemoides in the Bay.  Most are conducted by scientists at the Ches-




apeake Bay Instititute of  the Johns Hopkins University.  Other stud-




dies, such as an analysis of the pre-operational and post-operational




environmental conditions in the area of the Calvert Cliffs nuclear




power plant, are carried out by the researchers of the University of




Maryland.




2.5  Environmental Protection Agency




     The Chesapeake Bay Basin is within the jurisdictional boundaries




of Region III of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).  The




regional office, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, maintains a




local field office in Annapolis, Maryland.




     The Annapolis Field Office (AFO) is charged primarily with the




collection and analysis of water and bottom samples, to determine






                                2-18

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existing water quality problems and their causes, and the publication




of technical reports documenting investigations of the Chesapeake Bay,




Delaware Bay, Atlantic Coastal bays, and the tributaries to these




bays.  The AFO provides technical support to Region III activities in




enforcement, planning, surveillance and other programs.  The areas




of support encompass the disciplines of chemistry, ecology, biology,




and engineering with special capability in nutrient-phytoplankton




relationship studies and the application of mathematical modelling




techniques to air and water quality (Environmental Protection Agency,




1972d).




     The Annapolis Field Office has recently assembled a hydraulic




and water quality model of  the Upper Chesapeake Bay.  This model has




provided information on the probable effects of increased nutrient




loadings from point and nonpoint sources to the Upper Chesapeake Bay.




Other  math  models have been applied to  the  Patuxent River  Basin,




Potomac River Estuary, James River  Estuary, and Rappahannock River




Estuary.




     The Annapolis Field Office was a major coordinator and contri-




butor  of water quality data to a comprehensive resource study for the




Corps of Engineers Chesapeake  Bay hydraulic model.  This study in-




volved collection and storage  of water quality and data and municipal




and industrial wastewater inventories  from all sources (ICMSE,  1976).




     A new model that represents the state-of-the-art  in the area of




eutrophication dynamics has recently been developed and is undergoing
                                2-19

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sensitivity testing at the Annapolis Field Office.   The model should




have the predictive capability to assess light, temperature, and nu-




trients as rate limiting factors in the eutrophication process of the




Chesapeake Bay.




     The Annapolis Field Office provides continuing support to the




planning efforts in the Potomac River Metropolitan Washington Area,




which includes conducting water quality investigations in that seg-




ment of the estuary.  The results of the investigation have been




utilized in mathematical model verification studies, determination of




allowable wastewater loadings, and the quality effects of water




supply withdrawals from the upper estuary (Environmental Protection




Agency 1971; 1972b; 1972c; 1975).




     Since 1965, the Annapolis Field Office has collected biological




and water quality data for the tidal and freshwater portions of many




tributaries flowing into the Bay.  These include the Potomac, James,




Patuxent, Bush, Gunpowder, Middle, Severn, South, West Rappahannock,




York, Northeast, Elk, Bohemia, Sassafras, Chester,  Choptank, Nanti-




coke, Wicomico, and Pocomoke Rivers (see Appendix I-Major Monitoring




Programs).  A study on nutrient input to the Bay from the significant




tributaries was conducted from 1969-1970 (Environmental Protection




Agency, 1972a).  A subsequent study delineated the major nutrient




sources within the lower Susquehanna Basin (Environmental Protection




Agency, 1974b).




     Water quality samples from the problem areas in the Chesapeake





Bay Basin are analyzed for coliform bacteria, dissolved oxygen,



                                2-20

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biochemical oxygen demand, total and organic carbon, dissolved solids,




pH, alkalinity, chlorides, turbidity, chlorophyll-a, plant caroten-




oids, phaeophytin, and nutrients, which include carbon, nitrogen,




and phosphorous fractions.  In special instances, water and bottom




samples are analyzed for heavy metals, oils and greases, and other




constituents.




       The biological capability of the Annapolis Field Office currently




includes the enumeration and identification of freshwater and estuarine




rooted aquatic plants; a limited capability for identification of




estuarine larval fish; several methods for collection and identification




of estuarine and marine fishes; and estimations of estuarine benthic




communities.




       Data are continually being obtained in the open water of the




Upper Bay and in the Middle Bay to provide background data for




detecting nutrient and phytoplankton standing crop increases and




species changes resulting from proposed treated waste discharges.




       Through the administrative direction provided by Region III,




EPA is initiating a Chesapeake Bay water quality program.  The




primary goal of the program will be to develop a management system




designed to maintain and improve the overall water quality of the Bay.




The program will emphasize the coordination of existing programs




conducted by various planning and regulatory agencies of Maryland,




Pennsylvania, Virginia, Delaware, West Virginia, Section 208 PL 92-500
                                  2-21

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authorities, the Corps of Engineers, and the National Oceanic and




Atmospheric Administration.  The program will interface with existing




water quality management programs within EPA such as the NPDES permit




program which is a vehicle to control the quantity of pollutants dis-




charged from industrial and municipal point sources into the Bay.




Section 404 (PL 92-500) authorizes EPA to control dredge and field




operations.  The program also will utilize and coordinate area-wide




Section 208 planning and statewide 303 planning agencies to integrate




their efforts in the development of a Bay-wide management plan.




2.6  Federal Council for Science and Technology




     An Interagency Committee on Marine Science and Engineering




(ICMSE) was formed in 1971 by the Federal Council for Science and




Technology to coordinate marine programs.  The membership of the




Committee is composed of representatives of agencies (see Appendix II-




Cooperative Relationships) which have interest in oceanographic re-




search.  The Chesapeake Bay Subcommittee was formed by the Corps of




Engineers following an ICMSE request in 1971.




     The Subcommittee membership is available to  federal  agencies




with a strong commitment or research interest in the Bay.  Represen-




tatives from the States of Maryland and Virginia sit as observers on




the Subcommittee.




     The mission of the Chesapeake Bay Subcommittee is to allow for




the planning and coordination of federal and state programs relating




to the Bay.  The goal is to avoid unnecessary duplication of research
                                 2-22

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programs and to identify research, development, or demonstration needs




as they relate to the vitality of the Bay.




     The Subcommittee soon will release a report identifying various




agencies and institutions concerned with the water and related re-




sources in the Chesapeake Bay Basin.




2.7  Department of Health^ Education and Welfare




     The Food and Drug Administration of the Department of Health,




Education and Welfare maintains an office in Baltimore which supports




the National Shellfish Sanitation Program.  The Program is a volun-




tary cooperative project conducted by the Food and Drug Administra-



tion with 23 coastal States and the shellfish industry.  The program




office which has jurisdiction in the states of Pennsylvania, Dela-




ware, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia is located in Philadelphia,




Pennsylvania.




     Staff of the Philadelphia office and of the local office in




Baltimore advise the States with respect to their shellfish programs




and prepare evaluations of such programs based on a 1965 manual of




operations (Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1965) for




the sanitation of shellfish growing areas and of the harvesting and




processing of shellfish.  In 1974, the Environmental Protection Agen-




cy's Office of Water Program Operations prepared a guidelines bulle-




tin (Environmental Protection Agency, 1974c) for compliance with the




manual of operation in order to provide for the protection of shell-




fish waters which receive effluents discharged from municipal waste-




water treatment plants constructed with EPA funds.




                                 2-23

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     At present the Food and Drug Administration does not have exten-




sive enforcement powers under the National Shellfish Sanitation Pro-




gram.  Currently, regulatory activity is limited to the disallowance




of the interstate shipment of contaminated shellfish.




2.8  Department of the Interior




     Within the Department of the Interior, functions of the former




Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wild-




life have been assumed by the Fish and Wildlife Service which pro-




vides for the protection of wildlife refuges on islands and shoreline




areas of the Bay.




     These National Wildlife Refuges include the Susquehanna (Hart-




ford Co., Md.) Eastern Neck (Kent Co., Md.) Blackwater (Dorchester




Co., Md.), Martin (Somerset Co., Md.), Mason Neck (Fairfax Co., Va.),




Presquile (Chesterfield Co., Va.)» Fisherman's Island (Northampton




Co., Va.).  The refuges are managed for the production, migration,




and wintering of migratory birds and for the protection of endangered



species.




     The Service also conducts an extensive research program on the




accumulation of chlorinated hydrocarbons in migratory waterfowl at




its Patuxent Wildlife Research Center.  The Center collects the wings




of ducks killed by hunters and natural causes as they migrate along




the Atlantic Flyway.  These wings, are analyzed for the presence of




chlorinated hydrocarbons and the results are reported on a state by




state basis by the Center's Gulf Coast Field Station in Victoria, Texas.
                                 2-24

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The objective of the project is to establish trends in the uptake of
these compounds over time.  Collections have been made every three
years.
     The Migratory Bird and Habitat Research Laboratory of the Center
is conducting an extensive study related to an apparent change in
the feeding habits of wintering populations of the canvasback, Aythya
vallisneria, in the Bay.  During the last 10 years, the species ap-
parently has changed from a mixed diet of aquatic vegetation, primar-
ily wild-celery, Vallisneria americana, and invertebrate organisms,
to one composed almost entirely of invertebrates (preliminary find-
ings indicate the Baltic clam, Macoma balthica, to be the predominant
food organism).  Future studies will relate to seasonal dietary vari-
ations and daily feeding patterns.  Other Bay investigations conducted
by the Center relate to the population trends and reproductive success
of ospreys.  These studies include the effects of pollutants on the
reproductive rates.
     The United States Fish and Wildlife Service also maintains an
office in Annapolis.-  One of the main functions of this office is to
review environmental impact statements.  The Service is empowered
under the Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act (PL 85-624) to review
and comment on actions which are determined to be harmful to the fish
and birds of the Bay.
     The United States Geological Survey of the Department of the
Interior is involved in coordinating the acquisition of water data
                                2-25

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for streams, lakes, reservoirs, estuaries, and ground waters as part
of its National Water Data Network.  The network is an organized
system for collecting specific information at a series of stations
selected to satisfy a specific monitoring objective.  Information on
the data acquisition activities by federal, state and local agencies,
and private organizations that acquire water data directly in the
field and laboratory is reported to the Office of Water Data Coordin-
ation (OWDC) of the Geological Survey.  The information reported to
OWDC is published every two years in a catalog (U. S. Department of
the Interior, 1974).  This catalog is a file of information concern-
ing the water-data acquisition activities (station names, locations,
period of record, storage of data, parameters measured, frequency of
measurement, and reporting agency), and is not a file of water data,
which must be obtained from the reporting agencies.  The catalog re-
ports listings for stations which monitor streamflow and stage, and
the quality of surface and ground water.
     The Geological Survey maintains its own series of data-collec-
tion sites in its National Stream Quality Accounting Network (NASQAN).
This network consists of sites at the mouth of 325 hydrographic
"accounting units" and is designed to gather data on the quantity and
quality of water moving from one accounting unit to the next (Picker-
ing and Ficke, 1976).  Within the Chesapeake Bay drainage area, the
Geological Survey operates seven NASQAN stations (see Appendix  I -
Major Monitoring Programs).
                                2-26

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      Through the stations operated by the Geological Survey under




 NASQAN and  the National Water Data Network, and participating agen-




 cies, the Geological Survey stores and disseminates about 70 percent




 of  the water data used by state, local, private, and other federal




 agencies through its National Water Data Storage and Retrieval Sys-




 tem (WATSTORE).  The system is operated and maintained at a central




 computer facility at its National Center in Reston, Virginia.  The




 Survey is currently establishing a National Water Data Exchange




 (NAWDEX) to improve access to water data. One  of the first projects




 of  NAWDEX will be the development of a Water Data Sources Directory




 which will  identify organizations that collect water data, sources




 of  water data, media  in which the data are available, types of data,




 and geographic areas represented.




      The Office of Water Research and Technology of the Department of




 Interior administers a program of water resources research and train-




 ing authorized by the Water Resources Research Act of 1964, as amended.




Major program goals are to:  develop through problem-oriented



 research technology efficient methods for resolving local, state




 and nationwide water resource problems; train water scientists and




 engineers through their on-the-job participation in research work;




 and facilitate water research coordination.




      Under  Title I of the Act, the Office provides annual funding




 allotments  to support one state university  water resources research
                                2-27

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and training institute in each state.   Additional funds are also pro-




vided to these institutes for specific research project work on a




dollar-for-dollar matching-fund basis.  Other universities and col-




leges may participate in the Title I program work of the designated




State institutes.  Under Title II of the Act, grants and contracts




are made with academic, private^ public, or other organizations and




individuals having water research competence.




     The Virginia Water Resources Research Center at the Virginia




Polytechnic Institute and State University conducts numerous studies




related to the management of areas upland to the Bay.  These studies




have a direct application to the control of non-point source dischar-




ges entering the Bay (See Academic Institutions:  Virginia Polytech-




nic Institute and State University).  A similar Water Resources Re-




search Center is situated at the University of Maryland.




     Several of the academic institutions within the Chesapeake Bay




area have interacted, on various subject matters, with the newly




formed Office of Biological Services within the U. S. Fish and Wild-




life Service.  This Office has established new programs such as a




National Wetlands Inventory, and Power Plant Siting, Stream Altera-




tion, and Coastal Ecosystems projects within its Aquatic Ecosystems




Program.  It is envisioned that this office will become involved in-




creasingly in future research and planning studies in the Bay area.




2.9  National Aeronautics and Space Administration




     The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) estab-




lished by the National Aeronautics and Space Act of  1958, maintains



                                 2-28

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and operates a Chesapeake Bay Ecological Program Office at the NASA




Wallops Island Flight Center on Wallops Island, Virginia.




     The primary mission of the Chesapeake Bay Program Office is the




transfer of remote sensing technology to the user community.  The




Program Office has conducted remote sensing flights over the Chesa-




peake Bay since 1970.  Copies of all photographs and imagery are on




file at the NASA Wallops Island Data Center.  The Office has the




capability for ground verification of remote sensing data.




     Photos derived from information collected by remote sensing




devices aboard aircraft and unmanned and manned orbiting spacecraft




have been used by regulatory officials, planners, and academic




researchers in the detection of pollutant concentrations, analysis of




sediment transport, surveying of circulation patterns, and wetlands




vegetation mapping.




2.10  National Science Foundation




     The National Science Foundation (NSF) established by the National




Science Foundation Act of 1950 initiates and supports fundamental




and applied research.  Financial support is provided through grants,




contracts, and cooperative agreements to colleges, universities, non-




profit institutions, and other research organizations.




     Most of the NSF sponsored Chesapeake Bay projects are funded by




the Research Applied to National Needs (RANN) Program and are carried




out by the Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated  (CRC).  These
                                2-29

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projects include studies relating to the wetlands, shorelines, and




shallows of the Bay; a summarization of knowledge of the biota of the




Bay (funding originated from the Corps of Engineers); the sources,




sinks, dispersion, and biological transformations of pollutants enter-




ing the Bay; an inventory of sewage treatment plants along the tidal




portions of the tributaries to the Bay; and criteria for sewage ef-




fluent loading.  A recent RANN project is the entering of data from




permits for physical alterations into a Research and Management Shore-




line (RAMS) Data Bank (IBM 360-91 computer system) situated at the




Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU/APL).  The




study is associated with the Wetlands/Edges Program of  the Chesa-




peake Research Consortium and was initiated in 1973.




2.11 Department of Transportation




     Many activities within the Department of Transportation such as




those within the Federal Highway Administration, the Federal Rail-




road Administration and the Urban Mass Transportation Administration




have an indirect bearing on the quality of the Bay through the trans-




portation of material resources, finished products, and induced



development in and around the port areas of the Bay.  The Federal




Aviation Administration regulates air traffic operations around air-




ports serving the Bay area including an airport on Tangier Island in




the Bay and those related to a proposed airport on Smi'th Island.




Having a more direct contact with Bay related operations is the Uni-




ted States Coast Guard.
                                 2-3Q

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     The Coast Guard maintains rescue vessels, aircraft stations, and




radio stations to carry out its function of saving life and property




in and around the navigable waters of the United States.  This func-




tion includes the removal of hazards to navigation.  Under provisions




of the Federal Boating Act of 1958, Coast Guard boarding teams inspect




small boats to insure compliance with required safety measures.




     Related to its mission of marine safety, the Coast Guard estab-




lishes uniform safety standards for recreational boats; educates small




boat operators in safety requirements; and assures compliance with




Federal laws and regulations through education, inspection, and law




enforcement.  The Coast Guard is assisted in boating activities by




private citizens within the Coast Guard Auxiliary.




     Within the Bay, the Coast Guard establishes and maintains aids




to navigation including light structures, lightships, buoys, day bea-




cons, and long-range electronic aids.  It also enforces regulations




governing the anchorage, movement of ships, and the loading and un-




loading of dangerous cargos.




     Although the Coast Guard is involved with marine aspects of law




enforcement on the Bay, much of its activity relates to Federal Water




Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 and of the River and Harbors




Act of 1899 in regard to the prohibition of discharges of oil or ha-




zardous substances (defined by EPA) in navigable waters.  The Coast




Guard also supervises the cleanup and removal of the spillage of such




materials.  With respect to other agencies the Coast Guard cooperates
                                 2-31

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in regard to the enforcement of laws related to marine environmental




protection and conservation.




2.12  Smithsonian Institution




     The Smithsonian Institution, created by Congress in 1846 (as a




result of funds bequeathed by James Smithson),  was established to




increase and disseminate knowledge (9 Stat.  102).   The Smithsonian




Institution contributed in a significant manner to the preparation




of the first comprehensive summary of the state of knowledge concern-




ing the biota of the Chesapeake Bay for inclusion in the Corps of




Engineers, Chesapeake Bay Resource Study.  The  findings were pub-




lished in a supplement to Volume 13 of Chesapeake Science (Chesa-




peake Research Consortium, Incorporated, 1972).




     The Smithsonian Institution, a member of  the Chesapeake Re-




search Consortium, supports the Chesapeake Bay  Center for Environ-




mental Studies at Edgewater, Maryland.  The center is a Bureau of




the Smithsonian Institution from which it receives about 50 percent




of its funding.  Other funds are obtained through grants and contracts




from governmental entities such as the National Science Foundation




and the Environmental Protection Agency.




     Research at the Center focuses upon upland watershed and estuar-




ine systems in the subject areas of nutrients,  herbicides, bacteria




(including pathogens), general water quality parameters, hydrology,




land use, plankton, and benthic organisms in estuarine systems and




upland watersheds.  Current studies relate to a long-term investiga-
                                2-32

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tion of the Rhode River system and a relatively short-term study of




the Severn and South Rivers.  The Center also has initiated bioassay




analyses of higher aquatic plants in an effort to relate an apparent




recent trend in the reduction of higher aquatic plants in the Bay to




herbicide contamination.




     A monumental research effort, conducted by the Institution with




support from the Nature Conservancy, Kingsford Charitable Trust, led




to an inventory, assessment, and prioritization for acquisition of




natural areas of the Chesapeake Bay Region.  The study involved the




mapping of all areas in the Bay region protected from uncontrolled




development and those preserved and managed as natural areas, and the




identification and mapping of all locations of ecologically signifi-




cant flora, fauna, biotic communities, and ecosystems.  Selected




ecological criteria were assigned numerical ratings and, by the use




of overlay maps and a computerized data storage and retrieval system,




those areas identified as ecologically significant were assigned a




numerical rank.  A report of the findings of the research effort was




published by the Center for Natural Areas, Ecology Program, Smith-




sonian  Institution in May 1974 (Center for Natural Areas, 1974;




see Section 6 - Major Studies On The Bay).  Most of the studies of




the Chesapeake Bay Center for Environmental Studies are published




through the Chesapeake Bay Consortium as they reflect cooperative




research efforts within the Consortium.




     With regard to water quality, the Center maintains and operates
                               2-33

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nine monitoring stations on the Bay and its tributaries.  The first




of 18 planned stations was established in 1973.  All data are stored




on magnetic tape in digital format at the main office of the




Smithsonian Institution, 1000 Jefferson Drive, S. W., Washington,




D. C.  The Chesapeake Center for Environmental Studies is linked to




the data file through a terminal located at the Edgewater, Maryland




facility.
                                2-34

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3.0   STATE AND REGIONAL AGENCIES




3.1   Introduction




     The following is a discussion of the responsibilities, missions,




and roles of each major office of state government and selected




local offices as they relate to the Chesapeake Bay and its watershed.




The information was obtained primarily from personal interviews




with spokesmen for various state and local agencies.




     The responsibilities for each county office are not presented.




However, most counties bordering the Bay, especially in Maryland,




have initial land use and soil or water conservation authority.




Access to the local governmental officials may be obtained through




the appropriate county commissioner's office.  A directory to




such local offices is presented in Volume II of this report.



3.2   Delaware




    For the most part, the State of Delaware does not play a




major role in the protection or the enhancement of water resources




within the Bay.  The jurisdiction of the State over waters entering




the Bay is confined to the headwaters of tributaries on Maryland's




eastern shore and to the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal.  The




following agencies relate to water quality within the state.




    The Water Resources Section of the Environmental Control




Division, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control,




focuses on three mission areas: water  supply (allocation for




consumption), planning (with respect to PL92-500), and water pollution
                                  3-1

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 control (NPDES permit program, review of construction grant permits,
 and compliance monitoring program).   A technical services group
 provides sampling and analytical services in support of the Division's
 responsibilities.  In support of the Delaware Environmental Protection
 Act, the Water Resources Section collects samples on a regular basis
 from the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal.  These monitoring points
 are located at Delaware Route 896 - Summit Bridge, U. S. Route 13 -
 St. Georges Bridge, and Delaware Route 9 - Ready Point Bridge.
     Through the enforcement of Title 7 of the Delaware State Code,
 the Fish and Wildlife Division is responsible for the protection of
 all fish and wildlife resources within the state, including the
 protection of wetlands and other wildlife habitat areas.  The
 Division primarily is active in the protection of fishery resources
 within the Delaware Bay.
     Also active in the administration of Title 7 of the Delaware
Code (Chapters 39-41), the Soil and Water Conservation Division
works closely with soil conservation districts.  The main concerns
of the Division are land erosion, agricultural irrigation drainage,
and beach erosion.
     In the enforcement of Title 17 of the Delaware Health and
 Safety Code, the Bureau of Environmental Health is responsible for
 the quality of drinking water, waters utilized for swimming,
 institutional and camp health, and general sanitation within the
 State.  The Bureau conducts monitoring of streams (ones used as
 sources of potable water) and shellfish waters.
                                   3-2

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3.3  District of Columbia




     Although the District of Columbia comprises only a small




portion of the entire Chesapeake Bay Basin, it is the hub of a




Washington Metropolitan Area wherein urban population and employment




growth rates of 143 percent have been estimated for the period 1970-




2020 (Corps of Engineers, 1973).  Various offices of the District's




Department of Environmental Services have responsibilities relating




to the water quality of adjacent areas of the Potomac River estuary.




The following is a brief summary of the work of these offices.




     The major emphasis of the Bureau of Air and Water Pollution




Control, Department of Environmental Services, is public education




and enforcement.  The Bureau issues permits and initiates enforce-




ment actions through Federal courts.  The office of Environmental




Planning operates the District's sewage treatment plant and is




responsible for the compliance of the plant with Federal laws.  The




responsibility of the Office of Water Resources Management is to




assure the District of an adequate supply of water.  The source of




water supply for the District is the Potomac River.




     The main water planning efforts in the metropolitan Washington




area (Northern Virginia, the District of Columbia, and suburban




Maryland) are being conducted by the Water Resources Planning Board




of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (COG).  In




June, 1975 COG initated an areawide 208 (Section 208, PL 92-500)
                                 3-3

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planning effort.  A draft of a 208 plan is to be produced in June,

1977, and adopted by the Water Resources Board by February 1978.

In August 1975, the Water Resources Planning Board delegated the

Northern Virginia Planning District Commission (NVPDC) with the

responsibility for developing a 208 water management program for the

Occoquan River Basin in Virginia.   As part of the study, NVPDC will

develop washoff correlations transferable to urban land uses in

other watersheds.  The Water Resources Planning Board intends to

test the regional application of these correlation factors in the

Watts Branch and Seneca Watersheds of Montgomery Country, Maryland.

    It is envisioned that future efforts of the Council will con-

centrate on the following general areas:

         •  The adoption of a water shortage emergency plan alterantives

         •  The development of water resource projections and

            waste load allocations.

         •  The definition of wastewater treatment and conveyance

            system needs.

         •  The definition of institutional, financial and regulatory

            alternatives

         •  The establishment of a draft areawide water quality plan

            (Section 208, PL 92-500) by the end of June, 1977.

    To assist the Council of Governments in its work, water resources

advisory committees such as the Water Resources Technical Advisory

Committee (TAC) and the Water Resources Citizens Advisory Committee

(CAC) have been formed.
                                 3-4

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 3.4    Maryland




    Within the State of Maryland, the main responsibilities for the




monitoring of water quality within the Chesapeake Bay Basin reside




within the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and the Department




of Natural Resources.  The relationship of state agencies which




conduct activities related to the water quality or marine resources




of the Bay is shown in Figure 3.1 .   All departments and agencies




of the state were created by Chapter 527, Acts of 1970 except the




Department of Agriculture, which was established by Chapter 342 of




the Acts of 1972.




     The portion of the Chesapeake Bay which lies within the State




of Maryland encompases those parts of the open Bay and its tributary




estuaries which lie north of Smith Point, at the entrance to the




Potomac River.  The state owns the Potomac River, but not its




southern tributaries (the Virginia-Maryland boundary crosses from




headland to headland) nor the portion in the District of Columbia.




The interstate boundary crosses the Bay from Smith Point through the




middle of Pocomoke Sound on Maryland's eastern shore.  Maryland's




portion includes the deepest hole in the Bay (near the south end of




Kent Island), the Bay's narrowest segment (location of the Chesapeake




Bay Bridge), and part of the widest region,  located at the interstate




boundary line (Lippson> 1973).




    For the last several years the overall authority and responsi-




bility for planning, research, monitoring, and regulation of most
                                3-5

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matters relating to the water quality and ecology of Maryland's




portion of the Chesapeake Bay has resided in the Department of




Natural Resources (DNR).  Within DNR, Bay related planning and




enforcement activities are carried out primarily by the Energy and




Coastal Zone Administration, Fisheries Administration, Maryland




Geological Survey, Natural Resources Police Force, and the Water




Resources Administration.  Other offices such as the Maryland




Environmental Trust, Maryland Environmental Service, and the




Wildlife Administration are involved indirectly with the water of




the Bay.




     The State of Maryland has approved a continuing planning process




as authorized in Sections 303 (e) and 208 of PL 92-500 for 16 sub-




basins tributary to the Chesapeake Bay.  These subbasins include the




Lower Susquehanna, Pocomoke, Nanticoke, Choptank, Chester, Elk,




Bush, Gunpounder, Patapsco, West Chesapeake Bay, Patuxent, and the




lower, middle, upper, North Branch, and Metropolitan Washington areas




of the Potomac River.  For each of these subbasins,  water quality




management plans and implementation plans are being prepared.  Phase




I basin plans which focus on point source control needs have been




completed.  Phase II planning, which incorporates the findings of




208 areawide studies into an expanded statewide planning program




focusing on non-point pollution problems is underway and is scheduled




for completion by a court ordered mandated deadline of November 1,




1978 (applicable to all states, see Federal Register, Vol. 40, No.




230-November 28, 1975:  55321-55326 and 55334-55349).  The Water




                                 3-7

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Resources Administration (DNR), Environmental Health Administration




(Department of Health and Mental Hygiene), and the Maryland Environ-




mental Service (DNR) prepared a report which documents the state of




water quality, trends of water quality, an inventory of nonpoint




sources, and an assessment of nonpoint source impacts on water




quality for each of the subbasins (Maryland Department of Natural




Resources and the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, 1975).




The major finding of this report are summarized in Section 6.0




"Major Studies on the Bay."




     The Energy and Coastal Zone Administration established in




July 1975, is a new agency created through the reorganization of




various programs.  The administration is responsible for the




implementation of Maryland's Coastal Zone Management and Power Plant




Siting Programs.




     In 1973, the Governor of Maryland designated DNR to receive




and administer grants under the Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972.




Under the Act, the state has three years to develop a management




program for the coastal zone which is acceptable to local, state,




and federal agencies.  Currently Maryland is in its second year of




program development.  The program has several long-range goals which




include the identification and development of mechanisms to protect




coastal areas, the development of guidelines and standards regarding




activities which impact the coastal environment and the setting of




priorities for the utilization of coastal resources.
                                3-8

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     Until now emphasis has been on data collection.  In the third
year the Energy and Coastal Zone Administration will shift emphasis
to data analysis, development of a management plan, and review of
existing statutes and regulations to determine the need for additional
legislation required for program implementation.  Specific projects
planned for the third year of the program include (.he definition of
the coastal zone boundary which reflects the environmental factors
of coastal plain soils, tidal inundation, and vegetation; the
identification and priortization of natural areas of particular
state concern; the mapping of submerged lands (to be conducted by the
Maryland Geological Survey); and the identification of archeological
sites in coastal areas.
     A major program effort with regard to critical developmental
areas is to work with local governments to protect and enhance
coastal wetlands and waters.  The effort centers on an agreement
with the Regional Planning Council (RFC) to develop an approach to
coastal zone management for the Baltimore Metropolitan Area
(Maryland Department of Natural Resources - Regional Planning Council,
1976).   The agreement was entered into during August, 1975 by DNR,
RPC, Baltimore City, and the counties of Anne Arundel, Baltimore, and
Hartford.  The agreement focuses on the unique management problems
of an urban coastal area and the development of a coastal zone
program to meet the requirements of both the Coastal Zone Management
Act of 1972 and the land use planning requirements of HUD's "701"
grants program (Section 701 of the Housing Act of 1954, as amended).
                                3-9

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     The Power Plant Siting Program (PPSP) focuses on the environ-




mental assessment of proposed power plants, the acquisition of poten-




tial power plant sites, the evaluation of impacts resulting from




existing power plants, and special research studies.  The program is




financed by a surtax on electric energy operations in the State.




     The environmental assessment of future power plants involves




an evaluation of their potential effects on physical, chemical, bio-




logical, and socioeconomic resources.   The results of these studies




form  the basis for recommendations submitted by the PPSP to the




Public Service Commission on the requirements that must be incorporated




into the design, construction, and operation of the proposed plant




in order to provide environmental compatability.  Regional aquatic




studies are planned to occur through June 1977 on the Chesapeake




and Delaware Canal (site of proposed Philadelphia Electric Company




plant); at Bainbridge (former Naval Training Center in Cecil County-




proposed Baltimore Gas and Electric power plant); and at Stillpond




Neck in Kent County (a proposed site for acquisition).




     In compliance with the Maryland Power Plant Siting Act (1971)




the site acquisition program of PPSP must purchase and retain a min-




imum of four and a maximum of eight potential power plant sites in




a land bank inventory for future purchase from the program by utility




companies.  The priority for initial acquisition is given to sites




in north and south-central Maryland where they would serve
                                 3-10

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the two largest power companies in the state (Baltimore Gas and




Electric Company and the Potomac Electric Power Company).  To date,




only the Elm's site, located in St. Mary's County (south-central




Maryland) has been purchased.  The state has approved the Bain-




bridge site (north-central Maryland) for acquisition.  A third site,




Stillpond Neck, in eastern Maryland has been investigated and will be




considered for purchase after other eastern Maryland sites have been




studied.




     At sites of existing plants, biological and water quality monitor-




ing is being conducted to develop a quantitative basis for the Water




Resources Administration, DNR and EPA decisions on 316a (Section




316a, PL 92-500) applications for waiver of the required backfitting




of cooling towers.  Extensive studies are conducted at the new




Calvert Cliffs nuclear power plant (see Appendix I - Major Monitoring




Programs), and to a lesser extent the Morgantown, Chalk Point and




Dickerson fossil fueled power plants.  These studies as well as




surveys of the biotic resources of the Bay require coordination among




consultants, utility companies, and state and federal agencies through




the Environmental Research Guidance Committee of the PPSP (see




Appendix II - Cooperative Relationships).




     The research program of PPSP is designed by and receives technical



review from the Environmental Research Guidance Committee. High priority




research areas currently under study include the effects of thermal




stresses on fish eggs and larvae, the development of a captive
                                 3-11

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technique for in situ studies of heat stress on planktonic organisms,

and fish behavior near power plant intakes  and discharges (Energy and

Coastal Zone Administration, 1976) .

     The Fisheries Administration (DNR) conducts studies of finfish and

shellfish in the state.  The programs include an assessment of the con-

dition of oyster beds, the cultivation of natural oyster bars, and the

planting of oyster seed.   Currently,  the Administration is conducting

an inventory of all clam and oyster beds within the Bay and its tribu-

tary estuaries.  Its monitoring activities  also include the sampling

for marine parasites and fungi and an annual survey to determine trends

of fish populations in the Bay.  The  Administration also maintains an

intensive annual anadromous fish/stream survey program designed to pro-

vide information on the relationship  between water quality and the

location and productivity of anadromous spawning areas (see Section 6.0

Major Studies on the Bay; Appendix I  - Major Monitoring Programs).

     The Maryland Geological Survey  (DNR) conducts topographic, geological,

 hydrographic and  geophysical surveys within the state.   In relation

to the Bay, the survey investigates  and recommends plans for the pro-

tection of waterfront lands against  erosion and deposition.  The agency

currently is initiating an inventory  of geologic and mineral resources

of the Bay and its tributaries.  The  program entails the collection of

sediments and analyses for metals and various physical parameters from

over 3000 stations in the Bay.  The sampling effort is expected to be

continuous over at least a five year  period (see Appendix I - Major

Monitoring Programs).
                                  3-12

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     The Natural Resources Police Force is responsible for the enforce-

ment of the State of Maryland's boating and conservation laws on the

Bay and its tributary estuaries.  The Police Force is empowered to make

inspections of Bay fish and other seafood which is caught or sold.  The

Police Force frequently assists in the field operations of other sections

of DNR.

     The Water Resources Administration (WRA)  of DNR is responsible

for the control and abatement of water pollution in the State of Mary-

land.  Its activities include the establishment and enforcement of

water quality and effluent standards, water quality monitoring, and

water resources planning.  In addition, WRA administers and coordinates

several permit and licensing programs.  Many of these permits relate

to water quality within the Chesapeake Bay.  The following is a brief

summary of the types of permits issued:

     1.  Waterway Construction Permit.  Required before construction
         can begin in or alongside a non-tidal stream or any construc-
         tion that changes the course, current or cross-section of
         that stream or its floodplain.  For example:  construction
         of a bridge or culvert over a stream; placing fill, embank-
         ments, or structures of any type within the floodplain of
         any stream.

     2.  Waterway Obstruction Permit.  Required before construction
         can begin on dams, reservoirs, or on ponds in excess of the
         requirements for small ponds.

     3.  Small Pond Permit.  Required after the Soil Conservation
         District in a county approves a plan for a small pond project.
         Generally, a permit is not required for a pond less than 12
         acres but it must have Soil Conservation District approval
         and meet Water Resources Administration safety standards.

     4.  Water Appropriation and Use Permit.  Required before construc-
         tion can begin on any structure which may require the withdrawal

                                   3-13

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         of surface  or underground waters.  Water for domestic use,
         single  or double  household unit, or water for farms and
         livestock is  exempt.

     5.   Discharge Permit.   Required  for discharges to be in compliance
         with the National Pollutant  Discharge Elimination  System
         (NPDES) program.

     6.   Well Drilling Permit.  Applied for by the Master Well Driller,
         licensed by the State  Board  of Well Drillers, and  must be
         obtained before a. well can be drilled or driven.

     7.   Toxic Materials Permit.  Required for aquatic life management
         purposes before one can  add  toxic materials to  surface water
         for the control of algae, aquatic weeds or fish.

     8.   Oil Operation and Handling Permits.  Required before one can
         store,  transfer,  transport,  or dispose of oil and  petroleum
         products.   A  fee  is required.  The revenues from these fees
         are used for  defraying costs of the immediate cleanup of oil
         spills  in the Bay.

     9.   State Wetland License  (issued by the State Board of Public
         Works upon  a  recommendation  of the Department of Natural
         Resources).  Required  before any dredging, filling or construc-
         tion can begin in State  wetlands - that is, in  marshes, swamps,
         or submerged  bottoms below the mean high water  mark.  Such
         construction  includes  the dredging of a channel or boat basin,
         constructing  of a stone  or timber bulkhead, or  any other
         filling in  a  waterway.

    10.   Private Wetland Permit.  Required before any dredging, filling
         or construction can begin in marshes or swamps  that are above
         the mean high water mark but which are subject  to  periodic
         tidal action.  Such private  construction includes  the dredging
         of a canal  or boat basin, constructing bulkhead, filling to
         create  road,  or to change the marsh into buildable land.

     The Water Resources Administration conducts an extensive monitoring

program on the Bay.  An intensive ambient surface water  quality moni-

toring program is based on a five year cycle wherein 500-1000 stations

are sampled within a particular portion of  the Bay each  year.  This

program is coordinated with an  intensive monitoring program for point
                                   3-14

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source discharges, also conducted by WRA.  Other WRA monitoring programs
include the determination of trends in ambient surface water quality
and a WRA/EPA Potomac River Consolidated sampling program (see Appendix I -
Major Monitoring Programs).
     The Forest Service of DNR is responsible for the operation of
State forests, control of forest fires, roadside tree protection, and
technical advice in the general areas of forestry and reforestation.
The Forest Service provides a planning and consultant service to pri-
vate owners and leasing companies with timberland adjoining the Bay
to reduce erosion and runoff from logging roads and heavy cutting.
On the upper reaches of the Potomac in Maryland, the Forest Service
provides both consultation as well as seeds and seedlings for reclama-
tion of strip-mined areas.
     The Maryland Environmental Service of DNR is responsible for proj-
ect development, design and construction, and operations and maintenance
with regard to the purification and disposal of liquid and solid wastes.
The Service has bonding authority to finance and construct regional
treatment facilities, can charge for its services, and can enter into
waste management contracts.
     The Maryland Environmental Trust of DNR is a quasi-public agency
responsible for conserving, stimulating, improving, and perpetuating
the natural, scenic, and cultural qualities of the environment of the
State.  Programs of the Trust include scenic and conservation easement
acquisition, environmental education, and the dissemination of information
relevant to proposed and current state legislation.
                                   3-15

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     The Wildlife Administration is active in the areas of wildlife




and land management including waterfowl populations which inhabit




the Bay area.  A current project entails an annual documentation




of the general extent and location of standing rooted aquatic plants,




with emphasis on waterfowl preferred species.  The Wildlife




Administration has been conducting surveys of osprey nesting sites




in the Chesapeake Bay area since 1973.




     The Department of Health and Mental Hygiene administers, through




federal and state grants, a comprehensive water pollution control




program.  The program includes regulatory activities relating to the




design of sewage collection and transmission systems, control of




waste from marinas and boats, and training and certification of




sanitarians.




     With respect to the Bay, the primary responsibility of the




Department of Health and Mental Hygiene is to ensure that shellfish




are safe for consumption.  To fulfill this goal, the Department




maintains an extensive monitoring program of shellfish growing areas




in Maryland waters of the Bay.  Closed shellfish waters are sampled




as well as growing areas designated safe for shellfish harvesting.




The Department also conducts a routine shell stock sampling of




catches in harvest boats during the shellfishing season (see




Appendix I - Major Monitoring Programs).




     The Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) works with




the coastal zone management program to minimize impacts of highway




construction in coastal areas, especially in relation to resource



protection.                      3-16

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The Port Administration of MOOT has broad based powers which include




the protection of navigation  and the acquisition of port facilities.




The Port Administration has been active in the development of container




port facilities in the City of Baltimore and a terminal facility at




the City of Cambridge on the eastern shore of Maryland.  This seaport




allows refrigeration ships to carry frozen fish to packing plants




situated in the city.




     At the regional level, two Maryland planning councils, the Regional




Planning Council (RFC) and the Tri-County Council for Southern Maryland,




are active in Bay related matters.  The RFC is the 208 (Section 208,




PL92-500) planning agency for Maryland and is concentrating its efforts




in the Loch Raven watershed which supplies the water needs for over




one million people in the Baltimore area (see Appendix I - Major




Monitoring Programs).  RFC also is involved in a unified coastal zone




planning program for the Baltimore region in coordination with the




Energy and Coastal Zone Administration of DNR.




     The Tri-County Council for Southern Maryland (Calvert, Charles,




and St. Mary's counties) is a quasi-public planning agency concerned



with economic development and related water impacts.  The Council




compiles water quality data on dissolved oxygen, metals, bio-chemical




oxygen demand, and coliform bacteria collected by various agencies




active in the Bay.  Data compiled are recorded for samples collected




in the Patuxent River, Wicomico River, St. Mary's River, and in the




Chesapeake Bay at the mouth of the St. Mary's River.  The council also
                                 3-17

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keeps a duplicate of a portion of the data file of the State of Mary-




land, Division of Shellfish Studies, as it relates to the area of the




Bay of interest to the Council.  These data are stored on punched




cards and magnetic tape.   The data file is continuous from 1963 to




the present.




3.5  Pennsylvania




     The State of Pennsylvania is situated upstream from the tidal




waters of the Chesapeake Bay.  Flowing southeasterly as it leaves




the state, the main tributary to the Bay, the Susquehanna River,




enters Maryland where it is impounded by the Conowingo Dam.  A few




miles downstream, the River enters the upper Chesapeake Bay at Harve




de Grace, Maryland.




     The Susquehanna River Basin Engineer of the Division of Water




Quality (Department of Environmental Resources) has overall responsi-




bility and authority for the Susquehanna, including planning in




compliance with PL 92-500.  The State of Pennsylvania recognizes that




the bulk of undesirable constituents in the upper Bay are traceable




to the Susquehanna.  These pollutants include acid mine drainage from




abandoned mines in the upper and middle reaches (iron and acidity),




PCBs and nutrients from the Harrisburg area, pesticides and soil run-




off in the lower reaches, and heavy metals from numerous industries




and power plants along the river.  The Department of Environmental




Resources, in cooperation with the United States Geological Survey




and the Susquehanna River Basin Commission, monitors the Susquehanna
                                 3-18

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for water quality parameters including metals, PCBs, and pesticides




(see Appendix I - Major Monitoring Programs).




     In addition to PL 92-500, the Department  of Environmental Resources




administers the Pennsylvania Clean Streams Law (Act 275), the Pennsyl-




vania Solid Waste Management Act (Act 241), and Article 1, Section 27




of the Pennsylvania Constitution.  In enforcing these statutes, the




Department establishes and regulates water quality standards, reviews




applications and issues permits for construction and operation of water




supply and sewerage systems, provides grants for sewage facilities




planning, and conducts water quality studies and investigations.




     With regard for the protection of the Chesapeake Bay, the State




is preparing a Comprehensive Water Quality Management Plan (COWAMP)




for the Lower Susquehanna River Basin.  The plan includes input from




appropriate State, Regional, and local agencies.




     Other State agencies provide input to the Department of Environ-




mental Resources in matters impacting water quality and resource man-




agement.  These include the Pennsylvania Fish  Commission which conducts




surveys of fish in the Susquehanna River Basin.  The Institute for




Research on Land and Water Resources situated  at Pennsylvania State




University has conducted a number of water quality assessments in




streams tributary to the Susquehanna River. Most of these studies




have taken place in headwater areas.  These studies include analyses




of nutrients, organic loadings, and determinations of oxygen profiles




in Pine Creek, a tributary to the West Branch.  Eutrophication







                                 3-19

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investigations have been performed on Spring Creek and studies on




acid mine drainage problems also have occured in the West Branch of




the Susquehanna.




3.6  Virginia




     Water resources management in the Commonwealth of Virginia is




largely decentralized,  with program elements administered by a number




of relatively independent agencies.  This institutional framework has




resulted from the development of laws to focus on specific problems




as they have arisen.  In some cases a new,  independent agency has




been created to administer the law.  The relationship of these agencies




is shown in Figure 3.2




     At the beginning of the discussion of  each agency, the portion




of the Code of Virginia applicable to the statutory responsibility of




the agency is contained within parentheses  beside the agency title.




Unless cited specifically, most information contained within this




section was obtained during telephone conversations or personal inter-




views with members of the staff of the various agencies.  Additional




information was taken from the following publications:  Council on




The Environment,  1976;  Laird, 1974; and Walker and Cox, 1976.




     The State Water Control Board (Title 62.1, Chapter 3.1-3.4) is




the State's primary water resources agency  and exercises a wide range




of water resource management responsibilities.  One broad area of




responsibility is administration of the water quality management pro-




gram in compliance with PL 92-500 and state laws.  This includes such







                                 3-20

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               and Resources
         (Coastal Zone  Manag
               Act of 1973)*
                                                                                        Secretary of Human Affair:
  Department of Agriculture  and  Commerce
   (Titles 3.1, 59.1,  61.1 -  control o:
  Commission of Game  and  Inland  Fisher! es
    (Title 29 - management  of wildlife
       including freshwater  fiah.)
        Council on  the  Environment
       (Title 10 -  Coordination of
         environmental  programs.)
                 Department  of  Health
          (Titles 32,  4.1, 62.1 -  protection of
             public water supplies,  seafood
             sanitation,  and public  health.)
                                                                              •  Bureau  of  Sanitary Engineering
                                                                                (domestic  wastewater control and water supply)
      (mosquito control agencies)


      (radiological health)


Division of Local Health Services
    • Bureau of Environmental  Health
      (individual waste treatment  systems and water
      supplies)

    • Bureau of Tourist Establishment  Sanitation
      (safety of recreational  beaches)
                                        .opment
             park management.)

 Division of  Parks

 Division of  Salt Water Sport Fishing Promotion
        Marine  Resources Commission
    (Title 28.1 -  fisheries protection;
   Virginia Wetlands Zoning legislation
                of 1972.)
     (Federal Water Pollution Control
     Act  Amendments of 1972, Virginia
         State Water Control Law )
                      Division  of
           Consolidated Laboratory  Services
   (Administratively under  the  Department of Health,
     however,  it  operates on an independent basis -
                 analytical services.)
                                                                              i  Bui
    • Bureau of Environmental  Scienci
      (chemical analysis)
                                                                                Bureau of Microbiological Scienci
                                                                                (coliform analysis)
   Virginia  Institute of Marine Scien.
     (Titles 3.1, 10, 23, 28.1, 62.1 •
             marine research.)
         Virginia Port Authority
    (Title  62.1 - port development.)
(Title  21 -  erosion and sediment •
                                                         FIGURE 3.2
                                 RELATIONSHIP OF VIRGINIA AGENCIES CONCERNED WITH WATER
                                          RESOURCES IN THE CHESAPEAKE BAY BASIN
                                                           3-21

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duties as establishment of water quality standards,  issuance of




National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)  permits,  and




administration of the construction grants program for publicly owned




waste treatment facilities.  In addition to its water quality program,




the Board is responsible for water resources policy  formulation,  com-




prehensive river basin planning (Virginia State Water Control Board,




1976; see summary in Section 6.0 - Major Studies on  the  Bay), desig-




nation of critical ground water areas and administration of allocation




controls therein, State coordination of the National Flood Insurance




Program, and administration of a dam safety program.




     The State Water Control Board has maintained an extensive water




quality monitoring network in Virginia waters since  1970.  The moni-




toring entails surveillance of ambient water quality at  over 570




stations within the Bay or its tributaries (see Appendix I - Major




Monitoring Programs).




     The Marine Resources Commission (Title 28.1, Chapters 1-8; Title




62.1, Chapters 1, 2.1, 3.1, Ib, 20) enforces laws and regulations




relating to the commercial fisheries of the State's  tidal waters.




The commission maintains records of all of the oysters and clam plant-




ing grounds in the Commonwealth.  The agency controls use of the




publicly owned beds of the State's tidal waters, including operation




of an extensive program of leasing shellfish grounds.  It also has




several responsibilities under the wetlands program, including devel-




opment of guidelines for wetlands use, review of the decisions of
                                 3-22

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local wetlands boards, and administration of permit programs where




local governing bodies have not adopted an ordinance dealing with




wetlands zoning.




     The Virginia Soil and Water Conservation Commission (Title 21,




Chapter 1) exercises general supervision over State programs for soil




conservation and certain water resource development projects in small




watersheds.  Primary responsibility for implementation of these pro-




grams has been delegated to the State's soil and water conservation




districts and other political subdivisions, but the Commission pro-




vides various forms of coordination and assistance, including the




exercise of regulatory authority concerning local implementation.




One of the agency's functions in water resources management is exer-




cising its authority to approve or disapprove proposed projects




involving federal funding under the small watershed program.  Another




responsibility is the preparation of erosion and sediment control




guidelines for local programs to regulate land disturbing activities,




and reviewing permit decisions by soil and water conservation districts.




     The Department of Agriculture and Commerce (Title 3.1, Chapters 1-6




and 9-38; Title 59.1, Chapters 12 and 14; Title 61.1, Chapters 2-7) has




three main areas of concern with respect to the Bay:  a) future of the




fishing industry, b) effect of industrialization on the agriculture




and fishing industry and c) land application of municipal waste.  The




Department also controls pesticides and fertilizers through the certi-




fication of applicators.







                                 3-23

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     The Office of the Secretary of Commerce and Resources (Title 2-1,




Chapters 26-29) has received new responsibilities as a result of the




1976 session of the General Assembly which adopted legislation that




abolishes the Division of State Planning and Community Affairs.  The




first status report of the coastal zone management program,  prepared




under the Division, will be submitted to the Secretary of Commerce




and Resources by September, 1976.  The office works in union with the




Marine Resources Commission and the Virginia Institute of Marine




Science on matters related to coastal zone management.  To date the




Office has issued planning grants to Northern Neck, Middle Peninsula,




and Accomack-Northampton planning district commissions for area-wide




planning.  These districts do not have on-going 208 area-wide planning




efforts due to their location in non-metropolitan areas (first 208




studies centered on metropolitan areas).




     A primary responsibility of the Department of Health (Title 32;




Title 40.1, Chapter 1; Title 62.1, Chapters 3 and 4) within the




Virginia portion of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed is the regulation of




public water supplies.  The Department also exercises control over




certain waste disposal operations, including septic tank use and




disposal of solid wastes and toxic substances, and acts in an advisory




capacity to the State Water Control Board regarding large sewage treat-




ment plants.  Other relevant functions include seafood sanitation,




radiation control, and mosquito control.  The Board administratively




encompasses Consolidated Laboratory Services, a State analytical and
                                3-24

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testing facility serving a variety of other agencies.   For practical




purposes, however, this laboratory operates as an independent unit.




     The Bureau of Shellfish Sanitation of the Department of Health




conducts a number of sampling programs related to the  water quality




and shellfish populations of the Bay.  These programs  include shell




stock monitoring, Kepone monitoring, bacteriological sampling, heavy




metal monitoring, pesticide monitoring, and general water quality




surveillance.  Descriptions of these programs are presented in




Appendix I - Major Monitoring Programs.




     The Council on the Environment (Title 10, Chapter 17) is an advi-




sory body to the Governor.  Its duties include a continuing assessment




of environmental conditions and problems confronting the Commonwealth,




coordination and review of the State's environmental program, coordi-




nation of environmental impact analysis procedures and permit processes,




and environmental education.




     With respect to permits, the Council's role is to develop a uni-




form administrative system to facilitate the review and evaluation




of proposed State facilities which require multiple permits.




With respect to private interests, an applicant who requires more than




two permits may request the Council to provide aid in the coordination




of state review and action on the various permits.




     The Virginia Port Authority (Title 62.1, Chapter 10; Title 28.1,




Chapter 5) is a government corporation, chartered by the Virginia




legislature to promote and develop the ports of Virginia.  The ports






                                  3-25

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are Hampton Roads,  Newport News,  Norfolk,  Portsmouth,  and Richmond.




The Authority owns  a number of piers in the Hampton Roads area of




the Bay.  With respect to port facilities,  the Authority seeks to




secure the improvement of navigable waters  within the  State.




     The mission of the Commission of Game  and Inland  Fisheries




(Title 29, Chapter  2) is to preserve and propagate birds, animals,




freshwater fish, and other wildlife.  A primary activity of the Com-




mission is the management of freshwater sport fish within state owned




areas and, through  cooperative agreements,  on privately owned areas.




The Commission constructs and maintains boat ramps and promotes pub-




lic fishing and boating within the State.   The tidewater counterpart




of this Commission  is the Division of Salt Water Sport Fishing Promo-




tion of the Department of Conservation and Economic Development




(Title 10).  The Division collects landing statistics, publishes




literature, and contributes to the general promotion of salt  water




sport fishing.




     The Commission of Outdoor Recreation (Title 10, Chapter  2.1)




coordinates state and federal funding for outdoor recreation  and con-




servation of recreation lands.  The Commission reviews environmental




impact statements relating to impacts on outdoor recreation.   The




Commission also cooperates with utility companies to establish environ-




mental compatibility in the siting of transmission lines.




     The Virginia Institute of Marine Science (Chapters of Titles 28.1,




23, 62.1, 3.1, 10)  is both an academic institution and a state agency.







                                 3-26

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It functions as the principal oceanographic or marine science center




for the Commonwealth.  The Institute conducts basic and applied marine




related research and services as the technical advisor to coastal zone




management activities in the State.  The Institute provides educational




opportunities through agreements with colleges and universities (see




Section 4.0 - Academic Institutions).




     The Code of Virginia (Title 28.1, Chapter 1) defines Tidewater




Virginia as that area contained within 31 counties and 16 cities in




the State.  These areas generally are adjacent to tidal waters of the




Chesapeake Bay or its tributaries.   The Virginia Area Development Act




of 1968 allowed local governments to establish planning districts to




promote regional cooperation and coordination, and to provide planning




assistance to local governments.  Nine of these planning districts are




represented by "Tidewater" Planning District Commissions because they




encompass the areas designated as Tidewater, Virginia.  Four of these




Tidewater Commissions serve as 208  agencies for the development of




area-wide water quality plans.  These include the Northern Virginia




Planning District Commission in Falls Church, the Rappahannock Area




Development Commission (RADCO) in Fredericksburg, and a consortium




between the Richmond Regional Planning District Commission and the




Crater Planning District Commission in Petersburg, Virginia.  Other




208 agencies in Virginia are the Fifth Planning District Commission




in Roanoke and the Hampton Roads Water Quality Agency in Virginia




Beach.  With the exception of the Roanoke area, all 208 plans are in
                                 3-27

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the formative stage and non-point source monitoring is being initiated.
The monitoring programs for these agencies are presented in Appendix I -
Major Monitoring Programs.
3.7  West Virginia
     West Virginia, situated to the west of the Chesapeake Bay, contains
a portion of the Potomac River watershed.  The State is a member of
the Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin.  Agency respon-
sibilities, as they relate to water resources or to the Bay directly,
are discussed briefly.
     The Department of Natural Resources has the responsibility and
authority for water quality control and management.  The area of
interest, with respect to the Chesapeake Bay, is the Potomac drainage
basin in the eastern part of the State which includes the North and
South Branch of the Potomac, the Shenandoah, and the Cacapon Rivers.
The Department generally feels that any pollution originating in the
West Virginia portion of the basin would represent a miniscule portion
of the total pollution burden which reaches Chesapeake Bay from the
Potomac.  Nonetheless, the Department is committed to monitor and abate
undesirable effluents in West Virginia.  The principal problems are
viewed as acid mine drainage from abandoned mines, soil and pesticide
runoff from agriculture and deforestation, and  nutrient loading.  A
special study within the Potomac watershed centered on acid mine
drainage of the North Branch.  The Department of Natural Resources
currently maintains 16 monitoring stations on the upper Potomac River
(see Appendix I - Major Monitoring Programs).
                                 3-28

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     The Office of Federal-State Relations is responsible for water




quality and resource management planning under PL 92-500.  This office




works closely with the Department of Natural Resources with respect




to water quality planning.  The Office is formulating an overall




comprehensive Potomac drainage basin plan.
                                 3-29

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4.0  ACADEMIC INSTITUTIONS




4.1  Introduction




     Identification of the major thrusts of investigation or research




orientation is presented for those academic institutions which have




a particular interest in the Chesapeake Bay.  A listing of the princi-




pal academic researchers is contained in Volume II of this report.




Two academic consortia, the Marine Science Consortium, and particularly




the Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated, have an interest in




Bay research.  These consortia are described in this Volume under




Section 5, "Other Institutions or Agencies."




4.2  University of Delaware




     The University of Delaware, in Newark, Delaware, maintains a




number of marine science facilities near Lewes, Delaware.  Many of




the staff of the Department of Biological Sciences also serve as




faculty of the College of Marine Sciences.




     Most of the marine research activities of the University are




centered in the Delaware Bay or in near shore coastal waters.  However,




several studies have been conducted in waters contiguous with the




Chesapeake Bay.  These investigations centered on the ecological




effects of enlargement of the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal.




4.3  Johns Hopkins University




     The marine research division of Johns Hopkins University is the




Chesapeake Bay Institute which supports extensive facilities, including




research vessels, and staff dedicated to the full breadth of oceanog-
                                 4-1

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raphy, including biology,  chemistry,  geology,  and physics.   The




research emphasis is on the estuarine and coastal environment.




Several staff members are  engaged in  deep sea oceanographic studies.



     The programs of the Institute include studies of the forces




that act upon water and the motions that are produced by those




forces; scales of motion from small-scale, random, turbulent motions




to large-scale, well-organized estuarine and oceanic flows; and from




small capillary waves in laboratory tanks to large wind-induced waves.




     Research interests of the staff  include the sizes, shapes,




origins, and structures of  the Bay's tributary basins and the sediments




that are filling these basins.  Emphasis is placed on the sources,




routes and rates of sediment transport,  patterns and rates  of depo-




sition, physical and chemical characteristics of sediment,  and the




chemical reactions between the interstitial water of sediments and




overlying water.




     Members of the research staff are also concerned with organisms




that inhabit the water (microscopic plants and animals, plankton,




shell- and finfish). These studies include nutritional requirements




of organisms, spatial and  temporal distributions, evolutionary




development, and behavior.




     Recent investigations conducted by the Institute which relate




to the Chesapeake Bay  include studies of the physical and chemical




hydrography of the Bay and tributary estuaries, site evaluation




studies for proposed electric power plants, energy fixation and
                                4-2

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transfer in the planktonic organisms of the Bay, the role of different



nitrogenous nutrients with respect to the ecology of planktonic forms




within the Bay, the biogeochemistry of trace metals (especially with




regard to the mechanisms of mobilization and transfer across the




sediment-water interface), and the monitoring of dredge spoil disposal




operations.  The Chesapeake Bay Institute also serves in an advisory




capacity to city, state and Federal governments on environmental




matters and in the planning of programs designed to protect the waters




of  the Chesapeake Bay.




     From time to time the Institute has maintained stations throughout




the Bay.  While none of the stations are monitored continuously many




or all have been sampled repeatedly for specific projects.  Conse-




quently, there is an accumulation of long-term data for specific para-




meters.  The Institute analyzes and stores these collected data in the




University computer system in Baltimore.  In addition, the Institute




publishes a periodic directory of the parameters in the data bank and




many of them are suitable for trend analysis of the ecology of the Bay.




     This Chesapeake Bay Data Bank System of the Chesapeake Bay




Institute includes water chemistry and nutrient data collected by




Institute personnel since 1949.  Temperature, salinity, dissolved




oxygen, chlorophyll, pH, orthophosphate, total phosphate, and other




less commonly assayed parameters are included.  The data reflect the




entire Chesapeake Bay and most tributaries.  The data are stored on




magnetic digital tape and represent at least 7,348 retrievable stations
                                 4-3

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in the Chesapeake Bay proper and 12,937 retrievable stations in tribu-




taries to the Bay.  Several depths are sampled per station with several




of the parameters measured at each depth.




     The headquarters of the Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incor-




porated, is situated at the main campus of Johns Hopkins University




in Baltimore, Maryland.




4,4  University of Maryland




     The University of Maryland has contributed to Chesapeake Bay




research and education since the establishment of the Chesapeake




Biological Laboratory in 1924.  Currently there are 119 faculty mem-




bers with specific interests relating to the Chesapeake Bay.  The




names, addresses, specific interests, and recent publications and




reports of most of these faculty members are listed in the University




of Maryland Chesapeake Roster (Center for Environmental and Estuarine




Studies, 1975).




     At least 14 separate departments are conducting research




related to the Bay at the College Park Campus.  The Departments of




Biological Sciences and Political Science at the Baltimore County




Campus, and  the Schools of Law and Medicine at the Baltimore City




Campus are also conducting Bay-related investigations.  Biologically




oriented investigations also are conducted at the University of




Maryland's Eastern Shore Campus at Princess Anne, Maryland.



     The most extensive research activities related to the Chesa-




peake Bay and its watershed, however, are conducted by the five
                                 4-4

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laboratories of the Center for Environmental and Estuarine Studies




(GEES).  The Chesapeake Biological Laboratory at Solomons Island,




Maryland is the largest of GEES laboratories.  Estuarine research




investigations generally are conducted at this laboratory or one of




its field stations.  Aquaculture and marine waste studies are designed




and implemented at the Horn Point Environmental Laboratories at




Cambridge, Maryland.  Investigators at the Crisfield Laboratory in




Crisfield, Maryland specialize in marine products research.  Inland




research activities in the Chesapeake Bay watershed are conducted




by the staff of the Appalachian Environmental Laboratory and the




Inland Environmental Laboratory located at Frostburg, Maryland and




College Park, Maryland, respectively.




      In addition, the University of Maryland is a member of




the Chesapeake Research Consortium (Johns Hopkins University,




Smithsonian Institution, University of Maryland, and Virginia




Institute of Marine Science).  The members of the University




of Maryland faculty cooperate through the Consortium and in




many other ways with other agencies and citizens groups in




efforts to increase knowledge and enhance the uses of the




Bay.




     The University of Maryland also has a Cooperative Ex-




tension Service Branch which is active in Sea Grant Program




Development and the administration of Marine Extension Pro-




grams.  Extension agents are trained and advised on Bay-related
                                 4-5

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environmental programs.  Educational programs are conducted which

relate to business management for watermen; pesticide management,

wetlands management, and livestock management to eliminate water pol-

lution; consumer information on finfish and shellfish; and many

other Bay-related activities.

     Much of the data collected by the Chesapeake Biological Labora-

tory or staff of the College Park Campus of the University are archived

or summarized on data sheets or are in published reports.  Several of

the data files are automated and a few represent continuous recordings

of Bay parameters (Environmental Data Service, 1976).  These automated

data files include:

     1.  Daily temperature and salinity recorded for near surface
         water at the end of the Laboratory's pier on Solomons Island.
         Period of coverage is continuous since 1937 (5000 punched
         cards).

     2.  Data includes all fish survey work conducted by Chesapeake
         Biological Laboratory since December 1960.  This is a master
         file for fishes.  Collection data includes water chemistry,
         weather observations, fish lists, abundance, lengths, weight,
         and sex ratios.  The data are retrievable by river code,
         species, station, year or date (one 1,800 foot tape reel plus
         200,000 cards).

     3.  Analysis of Chesapeake Bay sediments for bacterial and viral
         components with ancillary data on water temperature, dis-
         solved oxygen, salinity, and nutrients.  The period of cover-
         age is since January 1964 (50,000 punched cards; one magnetic
         tape).

4.5  Old Dominion University

     Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, is an urban

regional university.  Founded in 1930, the University is a state-sup-

ported educational institution with approximately 10,000 students.

                                4-6

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     The Institute of Oceanography at Old Dominion University was




established in 1959 as a field laboratory in the Department of




Biology and became a separate unit in the School of Sciences in




1965.  It initiated master's and doctoral degree programs in 1966




and 1973 respectively.  There are presently seven faculty and staff




devoting full time to the Institute and thirteen faculty holding




adjunct or joint appointments.




     The Institute occupies a 20,000 square foot building on the cam-




pus of the University with eight laboratories for biological, chemical,




geological and physical oceanography.  It maintains docking facilities




at the Naval Amphibious Base on Little Creek in Norfolk.  A 65-foot




former Army T-boat has been converted by the Institute.  The vessel




contains oceanographic winches, sampling equipment and laboratory




facilities.  The research activities of the Institute include analyses




for metals, organic chemicals, nutrients and sediments, and utilize




underwater photographic equipment  and a dive locker in coastal and




estuarine studies.




     Areas of Bay research are physical, chemical, geological and




biological oceanography.  Emphasis of the research activities is on




transport, fate, and quality of sediments, chemical pollutants,




statistical wave theories, invertebrates, mariculture, and larval




development.  Currently, the Virginia Institute of Marine Science




and Old Dominion University are developing a relationship to pro-




mote cooperation in marine research activities.






                                 4-7

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4.6  United States Naval Academy
     The United States Naval Academy offers a four-year program of

academic, military, and professional instruction for the training and
education of personnel for naval service.  Completion of the program

normally leads to a commission in the United States Navy or the
United States Marine Corps and a bachelors degree in one of 27 fields

of study including engineering, oceanography, mathematics, history,

economics, and international affairs.
     Research projects on the Chesapeake Bay usually are undertaken by

faculty and students in oceanography as part of the curriculum in

environmental pollution.  Previous research activities include investi-

gations of the nature of copper in sediments in the Bay and bioassays
utilizing sediments and water from the Bay.

     Current and future investigative efforts center on additional

research on copper in sediments  and on bioassays of different condi-
tions of acidity or alkalinity utilizing fish from the Bay as test
species.  Much of this work will be directed toward the environmental
impacts of iron and steel pickling wastes on the Chesapeake Bay.

4.7  University of Virginia

     The University of Virginia, founded in 1819, is a state supported

coeducational university in Charlottesville, Virginia and includes
branches at Martinsville, Virginia (Patrick Henry); Wallops Island,

Virginia (Eastern Shore); Clinch Valley College in Wise, Virginia; and
several extension centers.   Professional as well as Ph.D. degrees
are offered.
                                4-8

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     Most research related to the Chesapeake Bay is conducted through

an agreement with the Virginia Institute of Marine Science whereby the

Institute serves as the Department of Marine Science for the College.

Expertise of the University staff primarily is related to the ecology

of wetlands adjacent to the Bay.

4.8  Virginia Institute of Marine Science

     Created by the Virginia Assembly in 1940, the Virginia Institute

of Marine Science (VIMS) is the principal state institution responsible

for research, advisory services, and education in the marine sciences.

Operating under the provisions of Chapter 9, Title 28 of the Code of

Virginia, it is the mandate of the Institute:

     1.   To conduct studies and investigations of all phases of the
          commercial fishing and sport fishing industries;

     2.   To consider means by which fisheries resources may be
          conserved, developed and replenished, and to advise state
          agencies and private groups on such matters;

     3.   To conduct studies and investigations of problems pertaining
          to other segments of maritime economy;

     4.   To conduct studies and investigations of marine pollution
          in cooperation with the State Water Control Board and the
          Department of Health and make the resulting data and
          corrective recommendations available to the appropriate
          agencies;

     5.   To conduct hydrographic and biological studies of the
          Chesapeake Bay and the tributaries thereof and all the
          tidal waters of the Commonwealth and the contiguous
          waters of the Atlantic Ocean;

     6.   To engage in research in the marine sciences and, with proper
          affiliation with one or more accredited institutions of
          higher learning, to provide education;
                                 4-9

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     7.   To conduct special studies and investigations as may be
          requested by the Governor.

     In 1970 the Governor designated the Director of the Institute

to serve also as the Marine Science Advisor to the Commonwealth.  In

conjunction with the development of a State Coastal Zone Management

System, the Governor also designated VIMS as the Coastal Zone Labora-

tory of the Commonwealth.  VIMS receives financial support from the

General Fund of Virginia; however, federal and private grants and

contracts comprise over half of its annual budget.

     The main campus is located on the York River at Glouster Point,

Virginia.  A branch site is operated at Wachapreague on the Eastern

Shore.  The VIMS staff, numbering over 370, includes more than 100

professional scientists and engineers, 100 technical employees, and

over 80 graduate students.  An additional 100 support people augment

the staff during the summer months.

     In fulfilling its mandate, VIMS serves as the School of Marine

Science of the College of William and Mary and the Department of

Marine Science of the University of Virginia.  A working arrangement

exists between VIMS and the community college system and the Mariners

Museum.  The Institute is currently building a working relationship

with other academic institutions within the State and is an active

member of the Chesapeake Research Consortium, Inc.

     There are approximately 200 on-going projects at VIMS.  Areas

of special research interest and participation include:  coastal zone

management, outer continental shelf oil and gas development, extended


                                4-10

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fishery jurisdiction and management, marine education and training for
emerging industries, environmental benchmarks and inventories, wetlands
preservation and management, environmental contaminants, environmental
impact statements, aquaculture of commercially important species and
advisory services and technical assistance programs.  A 1972 report
detailing research at VIMS  currently is being revised and updated for
publication in Autumn, 1976  (VIMS, 1976).  VIMS also is updating its
Chesapeake Bay  bibliographies(adding a total of 5000 references to
its bibliographies of Virginia Waters (Tennyson, et al., 1972) and
Maryland Waters (Stauble and Wood, 1975) and its  Virginia  State
Agencies Concerned With Coastal Zone Planning Management or Scientific
and Engineering Activities  (Laird, 1974) for Autumn release.
     Archive records, many on data cards, exist for the past 5 years
and are kept on the major rivers in the Commonwealth such as the James
(to Richmond), York (Mattaponi-Pamunkey Branches), and Rappahannock.
These data are obtained from samples collected by survey teams at about
fifteen stations located upstream from the mouth of each river.  The
surveys are conducted once each month during slack tide.   During summer,
sampling occurs twice a month.  These archival surveys are internally
funded.  Additional information on this monitoring activity is presented
in Appendix I - Major Monitoring Programs.
     Fisheries sampling is conducted annually in all major rivers and
the Bay.  VIMS collects samples to track juvenile fish migration to
complement sports fisheries and commercial fishing landings data.
Other monitoring work is dependent on contract work.
                                4-11

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     VIMS has an extensive information storage and retrieval system




for biological data.  A number of statistical and input/output programs




have been adapted at VIMS for relating species to certain temporal,




spatial, or chemical conditions.  The master file based on a taxonomic




code is maintained in the VIMS Department of Data Processing.




4.9  Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University




     Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (VPI) has




several departments conducting educational and research activities




on and adjacent to the Chesapeake Bay.  At least 29 faculty members




from the Departments of Agricultural Economics, Agricultural Engineering,




Agronomy, Environmental and Urban Systems, Biology (the Center




for Environment Studies), Civil Engineering, Forestry and Wildlife




Resources, and the Virginia Water Resources Research Center have




expressed research interests in the Bay or its Watershed.  The Depart-




ments of Chemistry, Aerospace and Ocean Engineering, Entomology, and




the Anaerobic Bacteriological Laboratory (actively involved in studies




of anaerobic bacteria and their efficiency In septic tanks of the Bay's




coastal plain) may provide supportive studies, although they are not




presently conducting specific research on the Bay.




     The majority of the research and educational programs are inland




and closely associated with land-use in the Bay watershed.  Many




studies conducted at VPI may be applicable to Coastal Zone Management




problems and to the identification and control of non-point source




pollutants in the Bay drainage system. In addition, many economic,
                                4-12

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 social, and legal concerns of the commercial finfish and shellfish




 industry are investigated through Extension Service Programs.




     The Virginia Water Resources Research Center located at the




 Blacksburg, Virginia campus is a Federal-State partnership agency




 which is attempting to find solutions to Virginia's water-resource




 problems.  The Center has four major functions:  to identify and




 evaluate water problems; fund and direct water-related research; pro-




 vide training opportunities in research for scientists in water-related




 fields; and to collect and distribute information on water resources.




 The Center was created by the Water Resources Research Act of 1964,




 and receives an annual research allotment from the Office of Water




 Research and Technology (OWRT) in the United States Department of




 Interior.  Additional funds for specialized projects have been obtained




 from the National Science Foundation, Virginia State Water Control




 Board, United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare, as




well as from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration under




 the Sea Grant Program.  In addition to VPI, Virginia institutions




which have participated in the programs sponsored by the Water




 Resources Center include:  Virginia Military Institute; University of




 Richmond; University of Virginia; Virginia Commonwealth University;




 Washington and Lee University; the College of William and Mary; Old




Dominion University; and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science.




     Presently, the Center's research activities are directed toward




 the implementation of its Five Year Research Program which lists
                                4-13

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eight areas of critical research needs identified through .a statewide




inventory of resource planners, managers and decision makers.  The




priority research areas are:  (1) Water and Land-Use Management; (2)




Non-Point Sources of Water Pollution; (3) Resource Inventory Monitoring;




(4) Water Supply; (5) Waste Treatment; (6) Non-Structural Flood Damage




Prevention; (7) Marine Environment; and (8) Outdoor Recreation.




     Specific studies underway relate to:  the deleterious effects of




agricultural chemicals, contamination of surface and groundwater from




swine waste lagoons, the causes and effects of turbidity in estuaries,




the impact of sediments eroded from urban areas, the implications of




using chlorine for disinfection, methods for reclamation of streams




to serve as habitats for fish, the potential environmental hazards of




fungicides, the use of biological organisms as detectors of toxic




substances, the role of sediments in eutrophication, and mechanisms




for watershed planning and management.




4.10  College of William and Mary




      The College of William and Mary, founded in 1692, is a state




supported coeducational college in Williamsburg, Virginia with branches




in Newport News and Petersburg, Virginia.  Professional as well as




Ph.D. degrees are offered.  Work related to the Chesapeake Bay pri-




marily is carried out within an agreement with the Virginia Institute




of Marine Science whereby the Institute serves as the School of Marine




Science for the College.  In relation to the Bay, faculty of the
                                4-14

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college have expertise relevant to the embryology of invertebrates,




reactions of invertebrates under stress, and the osprey population




within the Bay area.
                                4-15

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5.0  OTHER AGENCIES OR INSTITUTIONS




5.1  Introduction




     The following is a description of the missions and activities of




various interstate commissions and consortia which have an interest




in applied research, pollution abatement, or resource planning within




the Chesapeake Bay Basin.




5.2  Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin




     Approved by Congress in 1940, the Interstate Commission on the




Potomac River Basin (INCOPOT) was established by an agreement among




the states of Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia, and the




District of Columbia.  The governors of each state and the President




appoint three commissioners to the Commission.




     The Commission lacks regulatory or enforcement powers.  A concerted




effort by Maryland and Virginia to establish a Potomac River Basin




Compact (similar to the Susquehanna River Basin Commission and the




Delaware River Basin Commission) was abandoned in June 1976 primarily




due to reservations on the part of Pennsylvania and West Virginia.




     The Commission is active in the coordination of data collection,




evaluation, and in the dissemination of baseline water quality infor-




mation.  The Commission coordinates resource planning efforts  and is




active in public education.  As part of its role as coordinator, INCOPOT,




together with the Maryland Power Plant Siting Program, recently brought




biologists and managers together for a comprehensive discussion in the




form of a symposium on the protection and enhancement of the biological
                                  5-1

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resources of the Potomac estuary (Mason and Flynn,  1976).   The




Commission currently coordinates an extensive 55 station water




quality monitoring network (see Appendix II - Cooperative  Relation-




ships) and is also active in the areas of erosion control  and




water supply.  Recently, the Commission has been concentrating its




efforts on the lower portion of the Potomac for the integration of a




proposed estuary monitoring program to be coordinated among the states




of Maryland, Virginia, the District of Columbia, and the Environmental




Protection Agency.  It is envisioned that the collection of data within




the proposed baseline monitoring network will be carried out by the




appropriate governmental agencies.   The role of the Commission would




be to evaluate and report the data  and to promote the uniform use of




sampling techniques and analytical  procedures.  The actual water quality




testing would be conducted by the Virginia Consolidated Laboratories




of the Virginia Water Control Board in Richmond, Virginia, the Mary-




land Water Resources Administration laboratories in Annapolis, and the




laboratories of the District of Columbia, Department of Environmental




Services at the Blue Plains wastewater treatment plant.




5.3  Susquehanna River Basin Commission




     The Susquehanna River Basin Commission is a Federal-Interstate




Compact organization in which the Federal Government is represented




by a United States Commissioner (Special Assistant to the  Secretary




of the Interior).  The state members are the Governors of  Maryland,




New York, and Pennsylvania (84 stat. 1509).
                                 5-2

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     The Susquehanna River Basin Commission is responsible for program-




ming, scheduling, and controlling projects and activities within the




Susquehanna Basin that will develop ground and surface water supplies




for municipal, industrial, and agricultural uses.  The Commission has




developed a comprehensive plan for the management and development of




the water resources of the Susquehanna River Basin.  The Commission




does not regulate or enforce water quality standards (function of the




Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources), but it does review




all plans involving water use or discharge into the Susquehanna and




its tributaries.  The Commission cooperates fully with the Pennsylvania




Department of Environmental Resources in matters related to the manage-




ment of water quality.




     The activities of the Commission have included the water quality




assessment of specific problem areas, trend analysis throughout the




basin, special heavy metal and pesticide studies, current and planned




non-point source assessments, and the establishment of water supply




models (Susquehanna River Basin Commission 1975, 1976, undated).




     The Commission has a continuous monitoring station on the Susque-




hanna at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania and conducts a trend monitoring pro-




gram of interstate waters at the New York-Pennsylvania border (see




Appendix I - Major Monitoring Programs).  Data are available from




the Commission, and also are submitted to the Pennsylvania Department




of Environmental Resources for inclusion in WAMIS, the Department's




storage and retrieval system for water related data.
                                 5-3

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5.4  Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission

     The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission represents a com-

pact among the Atlantic Coastal states in which each state is repre-

sented by three commissioners.   One of the four regional divisions is

the Chesapeake Bay Section formed by the States of Maryland and Virginia.

     The Commission lacks regulatory powers except in such instances

where two or more states may delegate authority to the Commission to

control fisheries activities in the areas of common interest.

     The purpose of the Commission is to promote coordination among

the member states in regulatory activities, fisheries research, enhance-

ment and protection of fisheries, and education with regard to conser-

vation of fishery resources.  As part of the Commission's educational

objectives, it publishes brochures which characterize fishery conser-

vation practices and ecological relationships.   These are available

to various agencies and institutions for distribution to interested

parties.

     A recent project for the Commission, conducted by the Maryland

Watermen's Association, involved a series of meetings in New Jersey,

Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia for the purpose of

identifying fisheries problems as they relate to federal agencies.

Major findings of the study were (Wieland et. al., undated):

     •  It is the feeling of watermen that Congress and the public
        do not understand the value of the seafood industry in the
        country.  Capital backing is required to revive the industry.

     •  The present marketing-pricing-processing system is inadequate
        and needs to be revised.


                                 5-4

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     •  Little improvement in the pollution of fishing grounds has been
        observed by watermen.

     •  Pollution and foreign fleets are the largest threats to the
        mid-Atlantic fishing industry.

5.5  Potomac River Fisheries Commission

     The Potomac River Fisheries Commission is a cooperative effort

legalized in the form of a compact between the States °f Maryland and

Virginia to enhance shellfish resources of the Potomac River.  The

Commission works closely with the Maryland Department of Natural

Resources and the Virginia Marine Resources Commission in the manage-

ment of fisheries in the Potomac River.  Major activities of the Com-

mission include the surveying and reseeding of oyster beds, the

regulating of shellfish, finfish, and crab harvesting, and the issuing

of licenses to catch seafood from the river.

5.6  Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated

     The Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated (CRC) is an

academic association among the Johns Hopkins University, the University

of Maryland, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Virginia Institute

of Marine Science.  Each institution selects four members to sit on

the board of trustees.

     The Consortium was formed as a legal consortium corporation in

January 1972, and has utilized a multi-disciplinary approach to meet

the comprehensive research needs for the Chesapeake Bay.  Most of the

research efforts of the Consortium have been funded by the Research

Applied to National Needs (RANN) Program of the National Science
                                 5-5

-------
Foundation (NSF).   These efforts related to a characterization of the

biota of the Chesapeake Bay,  wetlands,  and the development of a Research

and Management Shoreline (RAMS)  Data Bank.  Recent studies have included

a Corps of Engineers sponsored evaluation of the impact of Tropical

Storm Agnes on the Chesapeake Bay (see  Section 6.0 - Major Studies on

the Bay) and a literature review prepared for NSF and EPA on the effects

of sewage treatment plant effluents on  fish.  To date, over 52 reports

have been published by the Consortium.

5.7  Marine Science Consortium

     Organized in 1968, the Marine Science Consortium is an association

of 17 colleges and Universities.  These include:
     The American University
     Washington, D.C.

     Bloomsburg State College
     Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania

     California State College
     California, Pennsylvania
Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Indiana, Pennsylvania

Kutztown State College
Kutztown, Pennsylvania

Millersville State College
Millersville, Pennsylvania
     The Catholic University of America   Pennsylvania State University
     TT	1- J	J_	  T~* r*                      tt^J	  J.	 *»  .   ^-*     ••    "^
     Washington, D.C.

     Catonsville Community College
     Catonsville, Maryland

     Cheyney State College
     Cheyney, Pennsylvania

     East Stroudsburg State College
     East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania

     Edinboro State College
     Edinboro, Pennsylvania

     Federal City College
     Washington, D.C.
University Park, Pennsylvania

Shippensburg State College
Shippensburg, Pennsylvania

Slippery Rock State College
Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania

West Chester State College
West Chester, Pennsylvania

West Virginia University
Morgantown, West Virginia
                                 5-6

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     The Consortium maintains a research vessel in the Chesapeake Bay




at Saxis, Virginia (Tangier Sound).  Other vessels are located at the




Consortium's laboratory on Wallops Island, Virginia.  The laboratory




conducts classes in marine subjects with an average enrollment of 150




students per day.  The laboratory also contracts with DuPont, the City




of Philadelphia, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration




to perform studies in coastal waters.




     With regard to the Chesapeake Bay, the laboratory has conducted




a few short term studies related to the nature of bottom sediments and




biota.  The laboratory has the capability to perform any kind of marine




research within the areas of heavy metals analysis, suspended sediments




monitoring, collection and measurement of bottom sediments, water chem-




istry, and marine biology.
                                 5-7

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6.0    MAJOR STUDIES ON THE BAY




6.1    Introduction




       A recurring comment of various officials, scientists, and




environmental organizations during this study was that the Chesapeake




Bay was the most extensively investigated ecological system within their




knowledge.  Certainly, the amount of recorded information is extensive.




In recent bibliographies on the Chesapeake Bay (Tennyson, et al, 1972;




Stauble and Wood, 1975) prepared by the Virginia Institute of Marine




Science, approximately 850 and 1,740 reports were cited respectively




for Virginia and Maryland waters of the Bay.  These works include




books, periodicals, government, institutional, and academic reports,




theses, and dissertations published largely in the last 100 years and




deal with taxonomy, natural history, physical studies, and pollution.




Literature searches conducted as part of this study revealed 376




periodical publications within the last 5 years which deal with




pollution in the Bay (Biosciences Information Service, 1976).  A




similar search of federal documents yielded 353 reports relating to




water quality within the Bay (N.T.I.S., 1976).



6.2    Major Studies




       Current research activities relevant to the Bay also are




extensive.  Many academic researchers possess expertise and retain




an interest in,or are actively involved In, research related to the




Bay.  A listing of these researchers and their respective areas of




expertise identified during this study is presented in Volume II of this






                                   6-1

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report.  A current area of major concern, and one In which studies




are being initiated, is the disappearance of eel grass and other




vegetation within large areas of the Bay.  This phenomenon has been




attributed to a number of causes including the effects of herbicides




contained in storm water runoff, the changes in salinity in the upper




Bay brought about by Tropical Storm Agnes, the browsing of cow nosed




rays, and increases in turbidity brought about by eroded particles




in suspension or algal cells.  Current research in this area includes




that conducted by the Smithsonian Institution's Chesapeake Bay




Center for Environmental Studies where bioassay analyses of higher




acquatic plants have been initiated in an effort to relate the




inhibition in plant growth to herbicide contamination.  Graduate




research at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science (Robert J. Orth)




centers around the use of remote sensing data to map the changes in




vegetation and the association of vegetation disappearance with




variations in winter mean temperatures for the southern portion of



the Bay.  The Department of Natural Resources is evaluating the impact




of existing levels of rooted aquatic plants In the Bay.  The U. S.




Fish and Wildlife Service is monitoring the distribution and abundance




of submerged vegetation at 642 stations in the Bay.  The EPA Chesapeake




Bay Program, through the U.  S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Office of




Biological Sciences), is currently funding a literature search of




existing information on submerged vegetation of the Bay.
                                  6-2

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     In an effort to summarize the major Bay research studies




that have been performed, a list of major reports on the Bay was




compiled based on recommendations by administrators and researchers




interviewed during the course of this study.  The list represented




major studies performed since 1970 and also the broad areas of research




which are of interest to the Environmental Protection Agency's Chesa-




peake Bay Program, namely - nutrients, toxic materials, non-point




source discharges, and physical alterations.  Twenty of these reports




were selected for summarization by a representative of the Chesapeake




Bay Program.  The topics of these reports or the findings of studies




described in the reports are summarized in Table 6.1  These summaries




include the name of the study, the sponsoring agency, a reference




to literature cited, areas of the Bay investigated, the objectives of




the study, and areas of study, e.g. nutrients, toxic materials,




non-point source discharges, physical alterations, and other areas.
                                 6-3

-------



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7.0  MONITORING OF THE BAY




7.1  Introduction




     During the course of this study, various sampling activities




relevant to the physical, chemical, biological, or health aspects of




the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries were identified.  Some of these




activities involved the collection of samples over a very short




period in support of a limited project.  In this study, emphasis was




placed on sampling efforts which required successive measurements




over a prolonged period of time for the purpose of detecting change,




or the lack of it.




7.2  Monitoring Activities




     Within the Bay area, several agencies have established organized




systems or networks for the collection of a specific kind of informa-




tion.  These systems include a series of points (stations)  at which




measurements are made at a predetermined frequency.  A summary of




these types of monitoring activities is presented in Appendix I -




Major Monitoring Programs for 51 discrete monitoring programs.  These




represent primarily major monitoring programs, i.e., ones which are




not short-lived or involve a localized sampling activity such as that




conducted by a municipality.  However, because of a special interest




expressed by the Chesapeake Bay program in non-point source dis-




charges, monitoring activities in the Chesapeake area being performed




in compliance with Section 208 (PL 92-500) were included.  These




sampling activities, for the most part, are short-lived and relate to




a portion of an area represented by a regional planning commission.



                                7-1

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     Of the 51 major existing monitoring programs identified during




this study, 34 address surface water quality,  2 are concerned with




point discharges, 5 with non-point discharges, 7 with the quality




and volume of sediments, 22 with the kinds and abundance of aquatic




organisms, and 3 with the abundance and edibility of harvested species.




Of the programs, 27 sample for toxic substances (chlorinated organic




compounds or metals) and 35 sample for nutrients (phosphorous or




nitrogen compounds).  A description of these programs is provided in




 Appendix I.   The description  identifies  by  name  the  agency conducting




 the monitoring and a person  to  contact  for  additional  information,




 the name of  the program and  purpose  of monitoring,  the  medium sampled




 and parameters analyzed,  the  number  and  general  locations  of  sampling




 stations,  the frequency of sampling,  the duration  of the monitoring




 program, and the form of  data storage.




      Of all  of the states contacted,  Maryland was  identified  as




 administering the most  comprehensive  monitoring  program with  respect




 to  the Chesapeake Bay.   For  more  than fifteen years, Maryland has




 had,  in effect,  some type of  intensive ambient surface  water  moni-




 toring program.   Currently,  Maryland  utilizes two  methodologies  to




 maintain surveillance of  its  waters,  an  intensive  monitoring  method-




 ology and a  trend monitoring  methodology.




      The intensive monitoring is  designed so  that  all waters  of  the




 State will receive detailed  sampling within some reasonable time




 frame.  Under the program, the  waters have  been  divided into  five
                                 7-2

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geographical areas.  Each geographical area is considered for inten-




sive monitoring work each year.  Thus, the entire State's waters




receive attention once in every five-year period.'  This time frame




was chosen primarily to coincide with information needs for waste




water discharge purposes and because water quality does not normally




change significantly within a lesser time frame.




     The trend monitoring program is designed to supplement the




intensive monitoring program in order to allow for a continuing




observation of the long-term changes occurring in surface waters.




This monitoring network currently consists of 133 stations situated




in Maryland waters of the Bay and its tributaries.




     In addition to the regular monitoring of surface waters,




Maryland has more than 40 individuals, located throughout the State,




who sample municipal and industrial discharges to assure compliance




with regulations specified in discharge permits and federal and state




laws or regulations.  In addition to sampling in response to approxi-




mately 1000 discharge permits, continuous checks for compliance with




state permits and regulations are made of such areas as wetlands,




sediment and erosion control, flood plain intrusion, and oil spill




violations.




     The monitoring programs of the State of Maryland are primarily




conducted by the Environmental Health Administration of the Depart-




ment of Health and Mental Hygiene and by various divisions of the
                               7-3

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Department of Natural Resources.   A total of 22 major monitoring pro-




grams were identified for the State.




     In Virginia, 8 monitoring programs were identified.   Of these,




5 are conducted by the Bureau of  Shellfish Sanitation of  the Department




of Health, and one each by the Bureau of Industrial Hygiene, also of




the Department of Health, the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, and




the Virginia State Water Control  Board.   Water quality monitoring




within the state is conducted by  the State Water Control  Board at




over 570 stations throughout the  Virginia portion of the  Chesapeake




Bay and its tributaries.  This basic network has been in  existence




since 1970.  The Water Control Board also conducts inspections to




assure that sewage and industrial waste effluents are in  compliance




with discharge permit requirements.  Extensive sampling is conducted




in shellfish growing areas and other waters for metals, pesticides,




coliform bacteria and kepone, by  the Bureau of Shellfish  Sanitation.




The Virginia Institute of Marine  Science sponsors a surface water




monitoring program for the purpose of obtaining data collected on a




regular basis and which reflect the state of water quality over a




period of time.  This archival program has been in existence for five




years.




     The monitoring activities of federal agencies include those of




the Corps of Engineers  (water supply), Environmental Protection Agency




(water quality and the National Estuarine Monitoring Program), U.S.




Fish and Wildlife Service (waterfowl and invertebrate sampling), U.S.
                                 7-4

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Geological Survey (water quality), and the National Marine Fisheries




Service (menhaden sampling).   The most comprehensive of these efforts




is that of the Environmental Protection Agency which regularly samples




for water quality at 133 stations through its consolidated Water




Quality Studies in the Chesapeake Bay and Potomac River.  Other




monitoring programs, although not extensive in relation to the




Chesapeake Bay, include those of the States of Pennsylvania and West




Virginia,  the District of Columbia, the Susquehanna River Basin




Commission, and various regional planning commissions.
                                  7-5

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 8.0  COOPERATIVE RELATIONSHIPS




      During the course of  this  study,  several  interagency cooperative




 efforts were identified.   The nature and purpose of these relation-




 ships varied according to  the objective of  the common  effort.   Most




 of the relationships took  the form of federal/state advisory bodies




 wherein the participants provided  guidance  with respect  to overall




 coordination and integration  of a  particular program.  Such advisory




 bodies include  the  "Chesapeake  Bay Program  Policy Advisory Committee"




 of the Environmental Protection Agency,  and the Corps  of Engineers




 "Chesapeake Bay Study Advisory  Group".   Other  groups,  such as  the




"Chesapeake Bay  Subcommittee"  of the Interagency Committee on Marine




 Science and Engineering, exist  primarily to promote communication and




 coordination among  the planning and management activities of the




 member agencies.




      A compilation  of those cooperative efforts or institutional




 mechanisms identified as relating  to the water quality of the  Bay are




 presented  in Appendix II - Cooperative  Relationships.  Contacts are




 provided for each relationship  to  facilitate the acquisition of addi-




 tional information.
                                 8-1

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9.0  SIMILAR RESEARCH - MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS




9.1  Introduction




     A major goal of the Environmental Protection Agency's




Chesapeake Bay Program is to develop a water quality management




program for the Bay.  Attempts have been made for other, somewhat




similar, bodies of water to establish an efficient approach to




water quality management.  Most of these efforts have been success-




ful because the entire body of water to be managed was situated within




the jurisdictional boundary of a single state.  Many of the large




surfaces of water which lie between states are protected through




interstate compacts or commissions such as the Delaware River Basin




Commission.




     The following is a brief description of the nature and extent




of water quality management efforts on other large marine areas.




This discussion is intended only as an identification of other




approaches to management or to the understanding of basic management




problems.  A detailed analysis is required to determine the




appropriateness of applying these techniques or lessons learned to




the development of a program plan for the Bay.




9.2  Long Island Sound Management Study




     One of the most recent comprehensive management plans for an




Atlantic estuarine system was developed by a water resources study




entitled "Long Island Sound Study".  The investigation was a




multidisciplinary, multi-agency, three year study.  The lead
                                 9-1

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agency was the New England River Basin Commission, Boston, Mass-




achusetts.  The results were published in 16 volumes (New England




River Basin Commission, 1975).




     In addition to making specific recommendations for solving cri-




tical problems, the study analyzed various legal and institutional




arrangements for managing the implementation of their recommendations.




Both short-term and long-term management plans were discussed.




     This study may be particularly relevant because Long Island




Sound and its drainage area extends over more than one interstate




boundary; therefore, many of the legal and institutional problems




may be similar to those that will be experienced in the Chesapeake




Bay program.




9.3  San Francisco Bay-Delta Plans




     In California the policies and goals of PL 92-500 are implemented




through the State Water Resources Control Board and the nine regional




Water Quality Control Boards acting in conjunction with Region IX




of the EPA.  It is the responsibility of the nine Regional Boards




to formulate and adopt water quality control plans that protect the




beneficial uses of the waterways under their jurisdiction and to




comply with the State policy for water quality control.




     The water quality control planning strategy consists of




identifying stream segments, listing beneficial uses, defining water




quality objectives, and quantifying anticipated wasteloads for each




stream segment.  Finally, the resultant water quality of the segment




is calculated and waste discharge requirements for controllable point



                                  9-2

-------
sources are established accordingly.  The basin planning document

contains a detailed description of the control concepts, an implemen-

tation schedule, and a program for assessing compliance.  The basin

planning is part of an on-going process and is continuously being

updated.

     In dealing with contiguous water bodies,  such as the San Fran-

cisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, water quality management

has been simplified by establishing basin, subbasin, and segment

designations.  For example, the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is

subdivided into the Sacramento River, Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta,

and San Joaquin River subbasins.  The tributaries to the Sacramento-

San Joaquin Delta were segmentized according to the definition of

"segment designation", which appeared in the Federal Register (40

CFR 130.2 M).

     The San Francisco Bay was subdivided in a similar manner.

Wasteload allocations were calculated for different segments of

the Bay and established water quality objectives were based on

beneficial uses.  Water quality objectives were established for the

following:

     bacteria                             floating material
     biostimulatory substances            oil and grease
     temperature                          pH
     chemical constituents                sediment
     color                                settlable material
     dissolved oxygen                     suspended material
     pesticides                           tastes and odors
     radioactivity                        turbidity
     electrical conductivity
     total dissolved solids
     toxicity
                                9-3

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9.4  The Management of Great South Bay




     Great South Bay located south of Long Island, New York, ranks




with the Chesapeake Bay as one of the most valuable estuaries on




the Atlantic coast.  The Great South Bay physically is quite




dissimilar to the Chesapeake Bay.  The Chesapeake Bay essentially is




a drowned river basin.  Great South Bay, however, is a lagoon formed




by barrier islands.




     The drainage area of Great South Bay is small in comparison




with Chesapeake Bay; therefore, non-point discharges contribute




lesser quantities of pollutants.  In addition, the stream flow in




the small tributaries which do flow into Great South Bay consist




of only 5% surface runoff.  The remaining 95% consists of ground




water seepage.




     Further differences exist in institutional and legal aspects.




Great South Bay is located within the jurisdiction of only one




State; and the two major Counties (Nassau and Suffolk) cooperate




fully in planning and management activities.  The Coastal Zone




Management Program for New York and the Regional 208 plan may




become effective management plans for Great South Bay without the




creation of additional agencies or commissions.




     Commonality between Great South Bay and the Chesapeake Bay is




that each is utilized extensively as a recreational area (passive




recreation, shellfishing, and sport-finfishing).  Commercial




shellfishing  (especially clamming) also is important to both bays.
                                9-4

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Furthermore, both bays function as a stopover for migratory water-

fowl and as a nursery area for commercially important finfishes.

     Three references which discuss some aspects of marine resource

management pertinent to Great South Bay, also may be useful to the

Chesapeake Bay program.  These references are:

     •  Ellis, R. H., P. B. Cheyney, J. T. Ball, and E. R. Sweeton.
        1972.  "Design of a management information system for
        coastal resources planning."  Prepared by the Center for
        Environment and Man, Inc., Sea Grant Project GH-63,
        National Science Foundation,  CEM-4103-460.  Regional
        Marine Resources Council.   Hartford, Connecticut,

     •  Ellis, R. H., P. B. Cheyney, F. A. Smith, R. M. Davis,
        and R. 0. Brush. 1969.  "The development of a procedure
        and knowledge requirements for marine resource planning-"
        Prepared by the Travelers  Research Corporation for the
        Marine Resources Council,  Nassau-Suffolk Regional Planning
        Board, Hauppauge, New York.

     •  Smith, F. A., L. Ortolano, R.  M. Davis, and R. 0. Brush,
        1970. "Fourteen selected marine resource problems of Long
        Island, New York."  Descriptive evaluations prepared by the
        Travelers Research Corporation for the Marine Resources
        Council, Nassau-Suffolk Regional Planning Board, Hauppauge,
        New York, 128.


9.5  New York Bight

     With respect to  the establishment of a research program

for the Chesapeake Bay, a similar program was developed  for the

New York Bight which  involved an  identification of  basic problems

within the Bight and  the establishment of a program of research to

understand the extent and sources of water quality  problems.  The

research program, termed the New  York  Bight Marine  Ecosystems Analysis

(MESA) Project,  is administered by the National Oceanic  and Atmospheric

Administration,  United  States Department of Commerce.

                                9-5

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     This project, established during July 1973, is a 7-year program




designed to:




     1.  Determine the fate and effects of pollutants on the ecosystem




        of the New York Bight, particularly in regard to ocean




        dumping.




     2.  Quantify environmental factors involved in the location,




         design, and operation of major offshore facilities.




     3.  Identify and describe important environmental systems




         operating in the Bight and define their interrelationships.




     The MESA program relies to a large extent on review by




advisory committees which reflect governmental, industrial,  academic




and public concerns.  These committees have met on a regular basis




to review the performance of the program and to recommend future




courses of action.
                                  9-6

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10.0  ACRONYMS AND INITIALISMS
      AEC
      AFO


      BG&E

      BWQMN

      CAC
      CBESS
      GEES
      COWAMP
      COG

      CRC

      DDT


      DNR


      EDBD
Atomic Energy Commission (functions divided in
1975 between the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
and the Energy Research and Development
Administration)

Annapolis Field Office (of Region III, Environ-
mental Protection Agency)

Baltimore Gas and Electric Company

Baseline Water Quality Monitoring Network

Citizens Advisory Committee (with reference
to the Water Resources Citizens Advisory
Committee of the Metropolitan Washington
Council of Governments)

Chesapeake Bay Earth Sciences Study (a program
of the Maryland Geological Survey, Maryland
Department of Natural Resources)

Center for Environmental and Estuarine Studies
(an organizational unit of the University of
Maryland)

Comprehensive Water Quality Management Plan
(with reference to water resources planning
by the State of Pennsylvania for the Lower
Susquehanna River Basin)

Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments

Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated

Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (an
insecticide)

Department of Natural Resources (of the State
of Maryland)

Environmental Data Base Directory (computerized
inventory of environmental data bases, Environ-
mental Data Service, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration)
                                10-1

-------
EPA

ERDA

FOSDIC


HRWQA

HUD

INCOPOT


ICMSE



JHU/APL


MDOT

MESA



NASA

NASQAN



NAWDEX


NMFS



NOAA


NODC
Environmental Protection Agency

Energy Research and Development Administration

Film Optical Sensing Device for Input to
Computers (of the National Bureau of Standards)

Hampton Roads Water Quality Agency

Department of Housing and Urban Development

Interstate Commission on the Potomac River
Basin

Interagency Committee on Marine Science and
Engineering (formed in 1971 by the Federal
Council for Science and Technology)

Johns Hopkins University, Applied Physics
Laboratory

Maryland Department of Transportation

Marine Ecosystems Analysis (a program of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra-
tion)

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Stream Quality Accounting Network
(a data collection network of the Geological
Survey, Department of Interior)

National Water Data Exchange (of the Geological
Survey, Department of Interior)

National Marine Fisheries Service (National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration);
formerly—Bureau of Commercial Fisheries

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra-
tion (Department of Commerce)

National Oceanographic Data Center (Environ-
mental Data Service, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration)
                          10-2

-------
NOS            National Ocean Survey (National Oceanic and
               Atmospheric Administration);  formerly—Coast
               and Geodetic Survey

NPDES          National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
               System (of the Environmental Protection Agency)

NSF            National Science Foundation

NTIS           National Technical Information Service

NVPDC          Northern Virginia Planning District Commission

OASIS          Oceanic and Scientific Information System
               (information retrieval system, Environmental
               Data Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric
               Administration)

OCZM           Office of Coastal Zone Management (National
               Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)

OWDC           Office of Water Data Coordination (Geological
               Survey, Department of Interior)

OWRT           Office of Water Research and Technology (of
               the Department of Interior)

PCBs           Polychlorinated Biphenyls (a group of
               chlorinated organic chemicals)

pH             The negative logarithm of the hydrogen ion
               concentration in water

Ph.D.          Doctor of Philosophy

PPSP           Power Plant Siting Program (of the Maryland
               Department of Natural Resources)

RADCO          Rappahannock Area Development Commission
               (situated in Fredericksburg,  Virginia)

RANN           Research Applied to National Needs (a program
               of the National Science Foundation)

RAMS           Research and Management Shoreline (a data
               bank situated at the Johns Hopkins University,
               Applied Physics Laboratory)
                         10-3

-------
RFC
STORET
TAG
USGS


VIMS

VPI


WAMIS



WATSTORE



WRA
Regional Planning Council (situated in
Baltimore, Maryland)

Storage and Retrieval (a data processing
system utilized by federal and state agencies)

Technical Advisory Committee (with reference
to the Water Resources Technical Advisory
Committee of the Metropolitan Washington
Council of Governments)

United States Geological Survey (Department
of Interior)

Virginia Institute of Marine Science

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
University

Water Quality Management Information System
(of the Pennsylvania Department of Environ-
mental Resources)

National Water Data Storage and Retrieval
System (of the Geological Survey, Department
of Interior)

Water Resources Administration (of the
Maryland Department of Natural Resources)
                          10-4

-------
11.0  LITERATURE CITED

Biosciences Information Service, 1976.  "Retrospective Citations 1971-
1976, on Pollution in Chesapeake Bay."  Ref. No. 91161, Biological
Abstracts, Philadelphia, Pa.

Center for Environmental and Estuarine Studies, 1975. "University of
Maryland Chesapeake Roster," University of Maryland, Baltimore,
Maryland.

Center for Natural Areas, 1974.  "Smithsonian Institution, Natural Areas
of the Chesapeake Bay Region:  Ecological Priorities," Washington, B.C.

Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated, 1974a. "Water Quality
Criteria and the Biota of Chesapeake Bay."  CRC Publication No. 41,
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.

Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated, 1974b.  "A Report on the
Concentration, Distribution and Impact of Certain Trace Metals from
Sewage Treatment Plants on the Chesapeake Bay."  CRC Publication No.
31, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.

Chesapeake Research Consortium, Incorporated, 1972.  "Biota of the
Chesapeake Bay,"  Chesapeake S c i enc e, 13:  Supplement.

Council on the Environment, 1976.  "Information Papers on the Environ-
mental Agencies of the Commonwealth of Virginia," Council on the
Environment, Richmond, Virginia.

Corps of Engineers,  1976.   "Announcement of Public Meetings on the
Chesapeake Bay Study," Baltimore, Maryland.

Corps of Engineers,  1975,   "Impact of Tropical Storm Agnes on
Chesapeake Bay,"  2  Vols.,  Baltimore District, Baltimore,  Maryland.

Corps of Engineers,  1973,,   "Chesapeake Bay Existing Conditions
Report," 7 Vols., Baltimore District, Baltimore, Maryland.

Department of Health,  Education and Welfare, 1965. "National Shell-
fish Sanitation Program Manual of Operations,"  Public Health Service
Publication No. 33,  Division of Environmental Engineering and Food
Protection, Shellfish Sanitation Branch, Washington, D.C.

Environmental Data Service, 1976.  A listing of the Environmental Data
Base Directory (EDBD)  Files described for Chesapeake Bay obtained by
a computer search of the entire EDBD file conducted on May 19, 1976.
Data Index Branch, National Oceanographic Data Center, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, Washington, D.C.


                                 11-1

-------
Environmental Protection Agency, 1975.   "Current Nutrient Assessment
Upper Potomac Estuary."  Paper presented at the Interstate Commission
on the Potomac River Basin Symposium,  "The Biological Resources of the
Potomac Estuary," June 4, 1975, Alexandria, Virginia.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1974a.   "Distribution of Metals in
Baltimore Harbor Sediments."  Technical  Report 59,  Annapolis Field
Office, Annapolis, Maryland.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1974b.   "Summary and Conclusions -
Nutrient Transport and Accountability in the Lower  Susquehanna River
Basin."  Technical Report 60, Annapolis  Field Office, Annapolis,
Maryland.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1974c.   "Technical Bulletin - Pro-
tection of Shellfish Waters."  EPA 430/9-74-010.  Office of Water
Program Operations, Washington, D.C.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.   "Summary and Conclusions from
the Forthcoming Technical Report 56, Nutrient Enrichment and Control
Requirements in the Upper Chesapeake Bay."  Annapolis Field Office,
Annapolis, Maryland.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1972a.   "Chesapeake Bay Nutrient
Input Study," Technical Report 47, Annapolis Field  Office, Annapolis,
Maryland.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1972b.   "Mathematical Model Studies
of Water Quality in the Potomac Estuary."  Technical Report 33,
Annapolis Field Office, Annapolis, Maryland.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1972c.   "Nutrient Transport and Dis-
solved Oxygen Budget Studies in the Potomac Estuary, Technical Report
37, Annapolis Field Office, Annapolis, Maryland.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1972d.   "A System of Mathematical
Models for Water Quality Management." Technical Report 51, Annapolis
Field Office, Annapolis, Maryland.

Environmental Protection Agency, 1971.   "A Water Resource-Water Supply
Study of the Potomac Estuary."  Technical Report 35, Annapolis Field
Office, Annapolis, Maryland.

Energy and  Coastal  Zone  Administration,  1976.  "Power Plant Siting Pro-
gram.   Long Range Plan."  Unpublished document dated April 1976,  Mary-
land Department  of  Natural Resources, Annapolis, Maryland.
                                11-2

-------
Hydroscience, Inc., 1975.  "The Chesapeake Bay Waste Load Allocation
Study."  Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Water Resources
Administration, Annapolis, Maryland.

ICMSE  (Interagency Committee on Marine Science and Engineering), 1976.
"A Survey of Institutions Concerned with the Water and Related
Resources in the Chesapeake Bay Basin."

Kerby, C., and J. McErlean, 1972.  "Scientific Personnel Resource
Inventory:  List and Index to Research Scientists Involved with the
Estuarine Environment, Especially the Chesapeake Bay."  No. 72-li,
Office of Oceanography and Limnology, Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C.

Laird, B., 1974-1975.  "Virginia State Agencies Concerned with Coastal
Zone Planning, Management or Scientific and Engineering Activities."
Special Report in Applied Marine Science and Ocean Engineering No. 67,
Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, Virginia.

Lippson, A.J., 1973.  "The Chesapeake Bay in Maryland.  An Atlas of
Natural Resources."  Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore,
Maryland.

Maryland Department of Natural Resources and the Department of Health
and Mental Hygiene, 1975.  "Maryland Water Quality 75."  State of
Maryland, Executive Department, Annapolis, Maryland.

Maryland Department of Natural Resources - Regional Planning Council,
1976.  "Existing Conditions Review,"  Second Draft.  Office of Energy
and Coastal Zone Management, Maryland Department of Natural Resources,
Annapolis, Maryland.

Mason, W.T., and K. C. Flynn, 1976.  "The Potomac Estuary Biological
Resources.  Trends and Options."  Proceedings of a Symposium,
Alexandria, Virginia, June 4-6, 1975.  Interstate Commission on the
Potomac River Basin, Bethesda, Maryland.

Mathias, C. McC., Jr., 1974.  "A Chesapeake Bay Report:  What We Have
and How We Can Protect It."   Unpublished Report by Senator Charles
McC.  Mathias, Jr.), U.S.  Senate, Washington, D.C.

Munson, T.O., and R. J.  Huggett, 1972.  "Current Status of Research
on the Biological Effects of Pesticides in Chesapeake Bay."  Chesa-
peake Science 13:S154-S156.

New England River Basin Commission, 1975.  "People and the Sound.  A
Plan for Long Island Sound,"  16 Vols.  New England River Basin
Commission, Boston, Massachusetts.

                                11-3

-------
 NTIS  (National  Technical  Information  Service),  1976.   "Retrospective
 Citations  and Abstracts on Pollution  in  Chesapeake  Bay."   User 1321,
 Print  8/5/1-353,  File  6,  Springfield, Virginia.

O'Dell, J., J. Gabor, and R.  Dintaman, 1975.  "Survey of Anadromous
Fish Spawning Areas."  Maryland Department of Natural Resources,
Fisheries Administration, Annapolis, Maryland.

Office of Coastal Zone Management, 1975.  "Considering Coastal  Zone
Management.  The Law, The Participants, The Program."  National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce,
Washington, D.C.

Pickering, R.J., and J. F. Ficke, 1976.  "Design of Nationwide Water-
Quality-Monitoring Networks."  Journal American Water Works Asso-
ciation 68:43953:43956.

Power, Garrett, 1976.  "The Chesapeake Bay:  Redesigning Its Institu-
tional Structure."  A paper presented to the Land Issues and Problems
Seminar, Newport News, Virginia.

Schubel, J.R., 1972.  "The Physical and Chemical Conditions of
Chesapeake Bay:  An Evaluation."  Special Report 21, Chesapeake Bay
Institute, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.

Shabman, L.A. and M. Ashton,  1976.  "Citizens Attitudes Toward  Manage-
ment of the Chesapeake Bay."  Bulletin 96, Virginia Water Resources
Research Center, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Blacksburg, Virginia.

Stauble, J. and D. H. Wood, 1975.  "The Chesapeake Bay Bibliography.
Volume III, Maryland Waters."  Specific Scientific Report No.  73,
Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, Virginia.

Susquehanna River Basin Commission, 1976.  "Assessment of the  Water
Quality of Streams in the Susquehanna River Basin."  Resource  Quality
Management and Protection Division, Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.

 Susquehanna River Basin Commission, 1975.  "Water Resources Program."
Susquehanna River Basin Commission, Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.

Susquehanna River Basin Commission, Undated.  "Nonpoint Source Pol-
lution Assessment of the Lower Susquehanna River Basin."  Susquehanna
River Basin Commission, Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.

Tennyson,  P., S. Barrick,  F.J.  Wojcik, J.J.  Norcross,  and W.J.  Hargis,
Jr., 1972.   "The Chesapeake Bay Bibliography,  Volume II,  Virginia
Waters."  Special Scientific  Report No.  63,  Virginia Institute of
Marine Science,  Gloucester Point, Virginia.

                                11-4

-------
U.S. Department of the Interior, 1974.  "Catalog of Information on
Water Data."  Office of Water Data Coordination, Geological Survey,
Reston, Virginia.

VIMS (Virginia Institute of Marine Science), 1976.  "Virginia State
Agencies Concerned with Coastal Zone Planning, Management, or
Scientific and Engineering Activities."  Revision of 1974 Report in
Preparation, Scheduled Date of Completion—August 1976.

Virginia Institute of Marine Science, 1975.  "The Chesapeake Bay:
A Study of Present and Future Water Quality and Its Ecological
Effects."  2 Vols., Gloucester Point, Virginia.

Virginia State Water Control Board, 1976.  "Water Quality Inventory."
305 (b) Report, Virginia Information Bulletin, 526, Richmond, Virginia.

Walker, W., and W. E. Cox, 1976.  "Recommendations for Improving
Water Resources Management in Virginia."  Special Report No. 1 (Draft)
April 1976.  Virginia Water Resources Research Center, Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia.

Washington Academy of Sciences, 1972.  "Symposium - Science and the
Environment (II):  The Fate of the Chesapeake Bay."  Journal of the
Washington Academy of Sciences.  62:51 - 223.

Westinghouse Electric Corporation, 1976.  "Upper Bay Survey."  4 Vols.
Oceanic Division, Annapolis, Maryland.

Wieland, T., B. Sieling, and D. Webster.  Undated.  "Eastland Resolu-
tion Fisheries Survey.   Mid-Atlantic Region Final Report."  Atlantic
States Marine Fisheries Commission, Washington, D.C.
                                11-5

-------
       APPENDIX I




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      APPENDIX II
COOPERATIVE RELATIONSHIPS
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Principal Agencies or Institution
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Water Resources Division, Depart
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        APPENDIX III




PROBLEMS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
            III-l

-------
     This section primarily contains comments concerning major




problems related to the Chesapeake Bay which were made by admini-




strators and investigators during personal interviews conducted in




the course of this study.   A discussion of the perspectives of




citizens is also given.




     In addition to the citing of commonly identified problems




(enrichment of the Bay, pollution from oil spills), almost every




individual held some differing viewpoint.  Academic researchers




presented well formulated recommendations for research investigations




or management actions.  Administrators were concerned with juris-




dictional disputes and lack of interagency cooperation.  Civic




groups, polled in a survey as part of another study, were action




oriented, well educated and tended to stress concern for problems




receiving attention from regulatory agencies (waste discharges,




oil spillage, wetland alteration).




     All comments are presented as anonymous and are grouped




within appropriate categories.  Each comment is identified as to




whether it was by a scientific investigator who conducts research




on the Bay or by an administrator who is not involved in day-to-day




research at the technical level.




Federal Perspectives




     The following comments are concerned with institutional rela-




tionships or pollution abatement mechanisms with respect to the Bay.
                                 III-2

-------
•  The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is
   a response agency and not an initiator of unmandated actions.
   The Agency should restrict its activity to the enforcement
   of existing legislation (Researcher).

•  The EPA should not monitor the quality of surface waters >
   which is the role of the United States Geological Survey
   (USGS).  The EPA only should monitor municipal and indus-
   trial wastewater outfalls (Administrator).

•  No management solutions can be implemented before basic
   problems are identified.  The first priority of any new
   research program is to identify the problems to which the
   program is to direct its attention (Researcher).

•  There is no Bay-wide mechanism for dealing with catastrophic
   effects such as large spills of toxic chemicals.  Contin-
   gency plans must be prepared (Administrator).

•  Abatement of non-point discharges to the Bay only can be
   accomplished through the implementation of appropriate soil
   conservation practices within the watershed of the Bay
   (Administrator).

•  Many agencies are duplicating planning efforts with respect
   to proposed research and monitoring activities.  These
   efforts must be coordinated (Administrator).

•  Various agencies have restricted public access to the Bay.
   There are not enough public lands in Virginia  (Admini-
   strator) .

•  Fishing and boating must be promoted to retain public
   interest in the Bay (Administrator).

•  The Environmental Protection Agency should not attempt to
   establish a data center.  Such efforts should become a part
   of the NODC/NOAA system.  Pass through funds should be
   given to NOAA to increase its coverage or to fund special
   data system requirements (Administrator).

•  Replicate mailing lists compiled by federal agencies may be
   unavoidable owing to a legal restriction to the exchanging
   of mailing lists among federal agencies (Administrator).
                          III-3

-------
     •  The only effective management policy for the Bay is the
        establishment of an interstate regulatory commission or
        compact.  Such a unit must have strong and comprehensive
        regulatory powers (Administrator).

     The following comments relate to problem identification or

research needs with respect to the Bay.

     •  In the period 1950-1960 visibility  was to a depth of 8 feet
        in certain parts of the Bay.   Now in some of those places
        visibility is less than one foot in depth (Researcher).

     •  Until now, physical and chemical analyses have centered on
        "quick and dirty" techniques.  A need exists for systematic
        precise analyses for all water quality parameters and pollu-
        tants including synthetic organics  (Researcher).

     •  At present, there exists a general  lack of understanding
        concerning the trophic levels of the Bay.  These must be
        characterized (Administrator).

     •  There are disagreements as to the value of hydraulic vs.
        mathematical models.  The Corps hydraulic model may be a
        step toward a mathematical model.  Fewer data are needed to
        verify a hydraulic model than a mathematical one (Admini-
        strator) .

     •  A grid system for determining sampling coordinates must be
        established (Researcher).

     •  Sustained programs in basic research are needed.  None exist
        at the present time (Researcher).

     •  More systematic biological work is  needed to determine the
        effects of pollution on species in the Bay (Researcher).

     •  A need exists to characterize the Bay in order to understand
        symptoms of degradation  (Researcher).

     •  Information on hazards from flooding must be accumulated.
        These data are required by the Housing and Urban Development
        Administration (Administrator).
                                III-4

-------
State and Local Perspectives

     The following comments are concerned with institutional rela-

tionships or pollution abatement mechanisms with respect to the Bay.

     •  Increased economic returns must be made to those who make a
        living on the Bay and use its resources (Administrator).

     •  Promote and encourage consumption of seafood products
        (Administrator).

     •  A need exists for the states of Maryland and Virginia to
        coordinate coastal zone planning efforts (Administrator).

     The following comments relate to problem identification or

research needs with respect to the Bay.

     •  The major state water pollution abatement agencies regard
        the control of non-point discharges to be of utmost
        importance (Administrator).

     •  Over 90 percent of the pollution burden in the upper Bay is
        attributable to the Susquehanna River (Administrator).

     Academic Perspectives

     The following comments are concerned with institutional rela-

tionships or pollution abatement mechanisms with respect to the Bay.

     •  The proposed EPA Chesapeake Bay Program should channel
        program funds as  much as possible into applied research
        rather than to internal staffing (Researcher).

     •  The proposed program should have continuity.   Plans should
        be made for transference of data base information after
        the Program has terminated (Researcher).

     •  Present Section 208 (PL 92-500) studies should be completed
        in order to identify data needs before the Program is
        initiated (Researcher).

     •  Initial sampling  should be concentrated in areas of the Bay
        adjacent to low population centers which do not warrant 208
        studies.   These areas require baseline data prior to induced
        changes with time (Researcher).


                              III-5

-------
•  Additional basic research regarding current measurement and
   tidal mixing (physical oceanography) to foster a better under-
   standing of particulate movement in the Bay (Researcher).

•  Long-term monitoring studies of biological communities are
   necessary.  This information is desperately needed for a
   better understanding of castastrophic changes, such as the
   sudden disappearance of eel grass in parts of the Bay
   (Researcher).

•  Historical archives should be established to monitor changes
   in fish populations, salinity, nutrients, and toxic materials
   (Researcher).

•  Four "pressure points" or areas of major concern in the lower
   Bay (tidal waters of Virginia and Potomac are the:  Upper
   James (Richmond to 10 miles below Hopewell), Lower James,
   Potomac, and areas around Newport News (Researcher).

•  Physical alterations should rank 4th in priority after
   toxics,  nutrients, and non-point sources as an area for
   further research (Researcher).

•  Evaluate the extent and source of chlorinated hydrocarbons
   in Bay waters.  Presently, there is a feeling that much
   pesticide wastes from homes and farms are entering the
   Bay (Administrator).

•  Investigate the reason for the anaerobic condition of
   large subsurface areas of the Bay.  Evaluate sludge
   depositions and compositon and its effect on oxygen levels
   (Researcher) .

•  Assess the cause of high copper levels in the sediments of
   the deep areas of the Bay (Researcher).

•  Investigate and account for the existence of wedges of high
   and low salinity in the Bay near Kent Island (Researcher).

•  Assess the effect of sedimentation rate on oyster production
   (Administrator).

•  Assess the effects of heavy metals on oysters and finfish
   (Researcher) .

•  Investigate the composition and effects of oil sludges
   dumped from bilges (Administrator).
                             III-6

-------
Citizen Perspectives




     An initial indication of the citizen perspectives of the




problems of the Chesapeake Bay was obtained during a recent




survey of civic, environmental, and citizen organizations in




the Bay area.  The survey results and conclusions have been pub-




lished as Bulletin 96 of the Virginia Water Resources Research




Center, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.




(Shabman and Ashton, 1976.)  Part of this survey consisted




of a list of 26 response items specifically designed to examine




certain types of respondent attitudes and opinions.  Six items




addressed the "environmentalist" orientation of the respondents;




three were designed to identify the respondents' opinions of




current management efforts in the Bay (specifically the Mary-




land and Virginia Coastal Zone Management Programs» and the




United States Army Corps of Engineers' Chesapeake Bay Study




Program); two items focused on proposed changes in management




institutions;  two were designed  to identify the respondents'




attitudes toward the public's role in the management of the




Bay; and the remaining 13 items were specific Bay problems  (as




identified from an extensive review of Bay-related literature,




as well as interviews with representatives of various govern-




mental agencies and the Citizens Program for the Chesapeake




Bay, Inc.).  The respondents were asked to identify the relative




importance of each of the 26 items.






                            III-7

-------
    Out of 4,561 surveys distributed,  617 completed surveys




were returned.  The respondents generally were of a higher socio-




economic status, were better educated, were involved in public service




activities to a greater degree, and displayed an "environmentalist"




bias toward the Bay more than typical  citizens living within




Chesapeake Bay Basin.




    Although the respondents did not represent the typical residents,




Shabman and Ashton (1976) suggest that they were typical of the




population most likely to become involved in a public-participation




effort related to Bay problems.




    In general, the respondents, although well educated, were




not well informed about the Maryland and Virginia Coastal Zone




Management Programs nor the United States Army Corps of Engineers




study.  The respondents did not express significant concern for the




creation of a unified management agency for the entire Bay, nor did




they suggest that the passage of new laws was needed.  They were,




however, mildly dissatisfied with present Bay-related administrative,




legal, and management programs.




    The ranked importance of each of the 26 items is listed in




Table III-l.  Table III-2 lists the priority of each of the 13




specific Bay problems from the Maryland respondent perspective and




Virginia respondent perspective.  Both Maryland and Virginia




respondents listed the same four problems as the four highest




priorities, although the exact order differed somewhat.  In addition,







                                 III-8

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                                                      Ill-ll

-------
                                TABLE  III. 2


       "HOW IMPORTANT  ARE THE  FOLLOWING  ITEMS  TO  THE  CHESAPEAKE
                         BAY AND ITS  USERS?"


                       (Shabman  and  Ashton,  1976)
Maryland
Rank*
Disposal of industrial and
municipal waste
Dumping of bilge washings
and oil from ships
Need to preserve wetlands
Preparing for the impact
of offshore oil development
Careless disposal of dredge
material
Siting of power plants
Runoff of pesticides and
fertilizers from agricultural
land
Erosion of the shoreline
Economic and environmental
threats to commercial fishing
Too rapid population growth
Need more wildlife management
growth
Need continued improvement in
port and shipping facilities
Need to improve public
access to the Bay

1

2
3

4

7
8


13
14

15
14

16

17

26

(1)

(2)
(3)

(4)

(5)
(6)


(7)
(8)

(9)
(10)

(11)

(12)

(13)
Virginia
Rank*

2

1
5

3

9
8


15
13

7
19

17

16

26

(2)

(1)
(4)

(3)

(7)
(6)


(9)
(8)

(5)
(12)

(11)

(10)

(13)
*
   Numbers in parentheses indicate rank of specific problem among the
   13 problem items,  while rank numbers not in parentheses indicate
   overall ranking out of all 26 items in the Question.
                               Ill -12

-------
the four lowest priorities also were the same (again, the exact




order differed).  A major difference between the two states was




a much higher ranking of the importance of the commercial fishing




industry by Virginia respondents compared to Maryland respondents.




Other specific problem items for which importance rank was signi-




ficantly affected by the State of residence included:  Need to




preserve wetlands, siting of power plants, dumping of bilge washings




and oil from ships, disposal of municipal and industrial wastes,




and too rapid population growth.  All five of these problem items




were typically ranked higher by residents of Maryland.
                                111-13

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