BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR AN
ESTUARINE  MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
         compiled by

  Brigid Rapp  Head Librarian
       •  FEBRUARY 1985

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                     BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR AN
                 ESTUARINE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
                         INTRODUCTION
     This bibliography was prepared at the request of the
Director of the Office of Marine and Estuarine Protection.
It is organized according to the following five basic steps
for developing an estuarine management program: (1) manage-
ment structure; (2) problem definition and assessment; (3)
problem prioritization; (4) problem solutions; and (5) imple-
mentation.  In many cases, the reports cited in this bibli-
ography can apply to more than one category.  Together, the
reports represent the development of theory, research and
action in estuarine management since 1970.

     The citations include books, journal articles, reports
and conference papers.  Within the five topics, the citations
are organized in alphabetical order by first author's last
name, or if there is no author, by title.

     Citations preceded by an asterisk are held in the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency Library System.  Other cita-
tions can be borrowed for EPA employees through interlibrary
loan.

     A comprehensive literature search using pertinent online
databases was performed to compile this bibliography.  These
citations were selected for their relevance to the EPA
estuarine management program.  However, there is a great deal
more literature available on all aspects of estuaries.  An
EPA librarian can assist in identifying other titles for
further research.

     Whenever possible, a descriptive abstract is included
with the citation.  The source of the citation and abstract
is noted by two letters enclosed in parentheses at the end of
the entry.  Those symbols represent databases searched to
compile this bibliography.  The key to those symbols follows:

(EN)  Enviroline
      Environment Information Center, Inc., 292 Madison Ave.,
      New York, NY  10017

(GR)  GeoRef
      American Geological Institute, One Skyline Pi., 5205
      Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA   22041

(NT)  NTIS
      National Technical Information Service, U.S. Dept. of
      Commerce, 5285 Port Royal Rd., Springfield, VA   22161

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(OA)   Oceanic Abstracts
      Cambridge Scientific Abstracts,  5161  River  Road, Bethesda,
      MD   20816

(PA)   Pollution Abstracts
      Cambridge Scientific Abstracts,  5161  River  Road, Bethesda,
      MD   20816

(WR)   Water Resources  Abstracts
      Office of Water  Research  and  Technology, U.S. Dept. of  the
      Interior, Washington, D.C.    20240

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                      BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR AN
                  ESTUARINE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
 I.    Management Structure

*Armstrong,  J. et al.,  Coastal Zone Management; the Process of
      Program Development. Sandwich, Massachusetts:  Coastal
      Zone Management Institute, 1974.
      The Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972 was enacted to
 encourage the coastal states to develop comprehensive coastal
 resources management programs which in turn would provide
 wise and effective management of the Nation's Coastal area.
 This document presents an in-depth discussion of the various
 elements of the act and attendant regulations that the States
 must consider in developing their own program.  It is broken
 down into five categories:  (1) substantive elements; (2)
 authority and organization; (3) organization and use of
 information; (4) public participation; and  (5) estuarine
 sanctuaries.  Substantive elements covered  include boundary
 determination, permissible uses, geographic areas of particular
 concern, and priority of uses.  The authority section considers
 the means of exerting control, organizational structures,
 and problems involved in designing organization capabilities.
 The information section  includes a consideration of  the
 types of information needed, and the use and sources of existing
 information.  A discussion of  the potential of public hearings
 as a tool for the generation of new  ideas  is presented in  the
 public  participation section.  The Estuarine  section discusses
 National Ecological Units.   (WR)

 *Carlozzi, Carl; King, Kathryn; and Newbold, Jr., William F.
      Ecosystems and Resources  of_ the Massachusetts Cepst.
      Boston, Massachusetts:  Massachusetts Office of
      Coastal Zone Management,  1975.  Sponsored by U.S.
      National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Rockville
      Maryland.  (Report  no. NOAA-76121305;  PB-263-411/1)
      This publication discusses all  the natural and  many man-
 made systems making up the Massachusetts coastline,  their
  importance  as facets of  the environment, and  the ways in which
  they are used and altered by man.  It has  been prepared as a
  guide for all Massachusetts citizens to use in order to better
  enjoy and understand their unique  heritage.   The  publication
  has  been divided  into four main sections.   The first two parts
  present an  overview of the  natural  forces  and ecosystems
  respectively that form the productive basis for coastal
  resources.   The next part  describes  man's  use of  coastal
  resources  and' the environmental consequences  of man's
  activities.  Finally  the report analyzes  important  broad
  coastal ecosystems  and their  resource wealth, complexity,  and
  environmental  health.  This  last  section  considers  needs
  for  future  scientific research and  information  tied  to  the
  management  of  Massachusetts'  wealth  of  coastal  resources.   (NT)

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                              -2-
*Chasis,  Sarah.,   Problems and Prospects of Coastal Zone
      Management:   an Environmental Viewpoint.   Coastal Zone
      Management Journal Vol.6, no.4 (1979): pp. 273+
      The present National Coastal Zone Management Program is
 inadequate to protect U.S. Coastal Resources and does not
 effectively address the problems that Congress recognized
 when it passed the Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972.  The
 need for a more effective Coastal Management Program is
 discussed.  Current program management problems are identified.
 Recommendations to strengthen Coastal Zone Management are
 presented.  (EN)

*Clark, John, and McCreary, Scott.  Prospects for Coastal
      Resource Conservation in the 1980s.  Oceanus  Vol. 23,
      no. 4 (Winter 1980-1981): pp. 22+
      The Coastal Zone Management Programs implemented by various
 State governments exemplify the progress made in this field and
 illustrate needs for future management policies.  Zoning, permit
 controls, and other land use controls have preserved ecologically
 sensitive shorelines and wetlands, while inadequate programs
 in other places have led to the erosion, pollution, and
 destruction of coastal ecosystems.  Future management goals
 must encourage cooperation and mutual support of local, state,
 and federal agencies.  (EN)

 Evans, N., et al.  Search for Predictability;  Planning and
      Conflict Resolution in Grays Harbor, Washington.  Seattle,
      Wash.:  Washington Sea Grant Program, Division ,of Marine
      Resources, University of Washington, 1980.  (Report no.
      WSG  80-5)
       In 1975  an experiment  in coastal zone management  began
 in Grays  Harbor, Washington.  The  frequent conflicts which
 had occurred  between government  agencies, development  interests,
 and environmental groups over shoreline development projects
 resulted  in  costly delays and great uncertainty about  the use
 of the estuary.  To resolve  these  disputes and avoid such
 conflicts in  the future, agencies with  decision-making responsi-
 bilities  in  the region formed the  Grays Harbor Estuary Planning
 Task Force.   The product  of  the  Task Force effort,  the Grays
 Harbor Estuary Management Plan,  was to  provide a management
 system to ensure that  future  uses  of the Grays Harbor  shoreline
 would be  predictable.  Now,  by mid 1980, although  some major
 agreements have yet  to be reached, the  Task Force  effort  is
 nearing completion.   (OA)

 Grindley,  J.R.  Problems  in  the  Management of  Estuaries.
       Fifth National Oceanographic  Symposium,  24-28
       January 1983.  Grahamstown,  South  Africa:  Rhodes
       University,  1983.
       In  recent years  the  need for  conservation,of  estuaries
 has  become widely  recognized.  However  effective  conservation
 often requires  some  degree  of management  and  alternative

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                              -3-
 management strategies  favour  different  users.   Questions  of
 mouth opening salinity control,  water level management and
 other issues create a  series  of  practical problems for estuarine
 ecologists.  (OA)

*Gusman, S., and Huser, V.  Mediation in the Estuary.  Coastal
      Zone Management Journal   Vol. 11,  no. 4 (1984):  pp. 273-
      295.
      Certain key disputes remained unresolved after extensive
 and for the most part successful efforts by the Columbia
 River Estuary Study Taskforce (CREST) to develop a management
 plan for the Columbia River estuary and its shorelands.  The
 remaining disputes, involving conflicts between resource
 protection and port development, were resolved by the mediation
 process described in this paper.  This process, involving
 exploration, process design,  negotiation, and implementation
 phases, led to the signing of an agreement by twelve negotiators,
 the subsequent endorsement of the agreement by the  federal,
 state, and local governmental bodies they represented, and
 the  incorporation of the terms of the agreement into the
 comprehensive plans for  local governments.  The agreement
 describes  the particular kinds of port-related development
 that might be  appropriate  at specific  sites  in the  estuary
 and  the  conditions under which  such development might  take
 place.   It also  outlines areas  where development  alteration
 would not occur.  For some of the sites  its  presents  constraints
 on dredge-and-fill activities,  turning  basin  and  navigation-
 channel  depths  and widths, corridors for pile-supported
 causeways and  accessways,  and mitigation policies. » (OA)

 *Guy,  William E.   Florida's Coastal  Zone  Management  Program:
       a Critical  Analysis.  Coastal  Zone  Management  Journal
       Vol.  11,  no.  3  (1983):   pp.  219+
       Florida has already enacted  most  of the  state  legislation
 needed for coastal zone  management  efforts.   However,  a  review
 of the state, coastal  zone  management plan shows  that  its
  effectiveness  suffers from a lack of public  and  local  govern-
 ment consensus.   The  various state agencies involved  and the
  laws and regulations  they  administer are not well coordinated.
  While excellent local, regional,  or state plans exist in many
  areas, they are often ignored in  local government decision-
  making.    (EN)

 *Jerome,  L.E.  Preserving the Nation's  Wetlands.   Oceans
       Vol. 16,  no. 3 (1983):  pp. 48+
       The annual loss of estuarine habitat, between 1947  and
  1967, has been estimated to range from 21 percent to 36
  percent -- a rate at which our wetlands would totally disappear
  in 300 to 400  years.   In 1972,  the United States Congress
  passed the Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA), administered
  by the Office of Coastal Zone Management (OCZM),  under the

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                             -4-
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.  Five short-
term goals are to:  1.  gain a thorough understanding of the
 ecological relationships within the estuarine environment; 2.
 [develop]  baseline ecological  measurements;  3.   monitor  sig-
 nificant or  vital  changes  in  the  estuarine  environment;  4.
 assess the effects of man's stresses  on the ecosystems and...
 forecast and mitigate possible deterioration,  and 5.  provide
 a vehicle for increasing public knowledge and  awareness  of
 the complex  nature of estuarine systems.   (OA)

 Klingeman, P.C.   General Planning Methodolgoy  for Oregon's
      Estuarine Natural Resources.  Corvallis,  Oregon:
      Oregon  State University,  1973.   (OA)

*Mieremet, R.B.  Federal and State Coastal Zone Management
      Efforts Directed at Estuaries and Freshwater Inflow.
      Proceedings of the National Symposium on  Freshwater
      Inflow  to Estuaries,  San Antonio, Texas,  September  9-11,
      1980.   Washington, D.C.:   U.S'.  Fish  and Wildlife Service,
      Office  of Biologial Services, 1981.   (Report no.  FWS/OBS-
      81/04,  Vol. I; PB82-131426)

      Special area management planning, enforceable policies,
 and improved coordination are being brought to bear on the
 decisonmaking process.  Mitigation and restoration projects  can
 help alleviate some of the past problems.  While coastal zone
 management has many significant tools which are being used
 and will be  used in the future to address problems relating
 to freshwater inflows  to estuaries, it obviously cannot cure
 them  all.   Some states have included all or almost all of
 their State as  the coastal zone  because  of  the watershed
 principle,  while others stop at  the 5 ppt salinity line of the
 estuary.  Extra efforts are needed to ensure good  coordination
 of government actions.  Coastal  zone  management  often requires
 some  compromises  between  preservation and development.   (WR)

 Narragansett  Bay  National  Estuarine Sanctuary Management
       Plan.  Providence, Rhode  Island:  Rhode Island Department
       of Environmental Management,  1983.  Sponsored by U.S.
       National Oceanic and  Atmospheric Administration, Office
       of Ocean and  Coastal  Resource Management.   (Report no.
       NOAA-83090702;  PB83-262089)
       In response  to  intense pressures on the coastal  resources
 of the  United States, Congress enacted the  Coastal Zone
 Management  Act  in 1972.   Four  years  later,  the Act was  amended
  to establish  the  National  Estuarine Sanctuary Program.  As
  stated  in the Act, "...the purpose of the estuarine sanctuary
  program is  to create  natural  field laboratories  in which to
  gather  data and make studies  of  the  natural and  human
  processes occurring  within the estuaries of the  coastal  zone.
 This  shall  be accomplished by  the establishment  of a  series
  of estuarine  sanctuaries  which will  be designated  so  that at

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                              -5-
 least one representative of each type of estuarine ecosystem
 will endure into the future for scientific and educational
 purposes.  The primary use of estuarine sanctuaries shall be
 for research and educational purposes, especially to provide
 some of the management information essential to the coastal
 management decision-making process.   (NT)

*Officer, C.B., et al.   A Perspective on Estuarine and Coastal
      Research Funding.  Environmental Science and Technology
      Vol. 15, no. 11 (1981):  pp. 1282-1285.
      There has been a dichotomy in approach to marine pollution
 problems between the research community and those responsible
 for environmental decision making.  The  net result has been
 that research carried on by government laboratories has often
 been restricted  to  immediate problem  solving.  The discussion
 in  this  article  is  divided  into  two parts:  first, an
 examination  of  the  affiliations  of  the  individuals who have
 made recent  contributions  to estuarine and  coastal research
 and of  the  sources  of  funding  for that  research  and,  second,
 a brief  history of  the  past 10  years  of  estuarine  research
 and some suggestions  for procedural  changes that might improve
 research results.   (OA)

 *Shabman,  Leonard and  Kerns, Waldon.   Intergovernmental Management
      for the Chesapeake Bay:   Emerging  Issues  and  Alternatives.
      American Water Resources  Association  Unified  River Basin
      Management Symposium,  Atlanta,  October 4-8,  1981.   s.l.:
      American Water Resources  Association,  1981(7):   pp.369+
      Traditional approaches  to the  design  of  intergbvernmental
 organizations for  watershed management have sought to instill
 broad  issue focus  and authority in  a single entity. -^ Alternative
 approaches are  being  sought to improve regional  management.
 A tiered institutional structure is emerging  within  the
 Chesapeake Bay  area.   Multi-issue agencies are being designed
  soley  for policy coordination  rather than program implementation.
 This technique  offers potential for facilitating coordination
  of agency decisions across the watershed.   Issues of water
  supply, water quality, and fishery management are addressed.
  (EN)


  II.  Problem Definition and Assessment

 *Alabaster, J.S.  Investigation of Acute Pollution Problems
       Affecting  Fisheries  in Estuaries and Coastal Waters.  FAQ
       Report;  Pollutants  in the Aquatic Environment; Detection,
       Measurement and Monitoring.  s.l.:  Water Pollution Research
       Laboratory, 1976.  pp.56+
       The main pollution problem for freshwater fisheries in
  the U.K. stems  from the combined effect on rivers of sewage
  and industrial  wastes  in  lowering the concentration of D.O. and
  raising  that of poisons, principally metals (copper and

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                             -6-
zinc), cyanides, ammonia, and phenols.  Short-term  lethal
effects of these conditions on trout can be  reasonably well-
defined from  laboratory studies.  The long-term effects of
polluted  streams on  trout and other coarse  fisheries  remian
to be determined.  The lethal effects of mixtures of  poisons
and water quality  fluctuations are discussed.  An empirical
relation  between one predominant water  quality characteristic's
temporal  distribution and the status of a  fish population  can
be used to formulate water quality criteria, though other  data
are required.   (EN)

Capone, T.E.  and Armstrong, N.E.  A Computerized Assessment o_f
     Environmental Impacts in an Estuarine  System.  Austin,
     Texas:  Center for Research  in Water Resources, Environmental
      Health  Engineering Laboratory, Civil  Engineering Department,
      University of Texas  of  Austin,  1981.    (OA)

*Carter, Karen B.,  and  Flynn,  Kevin  C.   Pollution Control  and
      the  Chesapeake  Bay.  Water  Pollution  Control  Federation
      Journal  Vol. 55,  no.  10  (October  1983):  pp.  1218+
      The  Chesapeake  Bay  is  both  a  delicate balance  of fresh-
 water and saltwater  plants  and  animals, and the  largest and
 most productive estuary  in  the  world.   For  the last decade
 EPA has conducted  a  program examining  the  pollution problems
 in and around the  Bay,  and  1983  marks  the  first year that
 data from this program is to be  used.   Data will be kept up
 to date on the Bay's ecosystems.   Any  pollution problems
 will be controlled and eliminated  as they  arise.    (EN)

 Coastal Zone Management Problems.   Corvallis, Oregop:  Water
      Resources Research Institute,  Oregon State University,
      1974.  Sponsored by U.S.  Office of Water Research and
      Technology, Washington, D.C.  (report  no. SEMN-VtfR-018.74;
      W74-12756; OWRT-A-999-ORE(16); PB-236-470/1)
      The report describes the coastal  zone, composed of the
 coastal plains, the continental shelf,  bays, estuaries,
 lagoons  and  deltas as an area rich in  natural resources and
 concentrated human  activities.  Lack of a  comprehensive
 inventory of coastal resources, unbridled  and poorly conceived
 development,  increased population activities, uncontrolled
 harvesting  of resources, and limited local  financial resources
 to facilitate adequate provision of public  services  within
 the zone are among  the problems plaguing  the coastal area.
 Dredging and filling have particularly affected the  environment
 through  altered water circulation, physical removal  of
 organisms,  nutrient releases, and  increases in  turbidity,
 suspended solids, and heavy metal  levels.   One management
 technique is discussed,  a diversity approach, which  encourages
 clustering  of development only within  sleeted estuarine
 systems.  (NT)

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                              -7-
*Cronin, L.  Eugene (ed.).   Estuarine Research.  N.Y.: Academic,
      1975.   2 vols.
      68 papers from a meeting of the Estuarine Research Federa-
 tion at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, October 1973.

*Cumberland, J.H.   Economic Analysis in the Evaluation and
      Management of Estuaries.  Estuarine Pollution Control
      and Assessment;  Proceedings of a Conference, Pensacola,
      Florida, February 11-13, 1975.  (Report no. EPA-440/1-77-
      007B;  PB-265-467)
      An economic-environmental systems model for analyzing
 estuaries which has been  used in Maryland to forecast the
 quantities and types of waste and residuals which will be
 generated through the year 1985 for the Chesapeake Bay and
 each of its major tributaries is described.  The model indicates
 that the amount of residuals will be a function of the rate
 and composition of economic  development.  Consequently, economic
 development and growth in the region can be  expected to
 generate water quality problems of  increasing magnitude for
 all estuaries in the U.S.  Various  corrective policy measures
 are evaluated for dealing with  the  environmental  threat  to
 the quality  of estuarine waters.  One of the most serious
 environmental impacts  is aesthetic  damage and methods  are
 suggested  for applying charges  for  various  levels of aesthetic
 damage  in  order  to  encourage improved qualities of  economic
 development.   (WR)

 Druery, B.M, et  al.   Engineering Approach to the Management
      of an Estuary.   Fifth Australian Conference on Coastal  and
      Ocean Engineering 1981;  Offshore Structures.t Barton,
      Australia:  Institution of Engineers,  Australia,  1981.   pp.
      111-112.
      The main study  objective was  to  carry  out  an engineering
 analysis of  the  estuarine processes to provide  a  sound
 engineering  base from which  responsible  planning  decisions
 could  be made.   The study  included identification of  the
 demands of the  users of  the  waterway together with  consideration
 of the requirements of land  management  authorities.   The
 findings were  presented  within  the following format:   an
 assessment and  quantification of  the present and  future
 constraints and opportunities offered by the waterway;
 engineering guidelines and  comment on the  development and
 management of the waterway  and  its environs.  Guidelines were
 produced  for:   (a)  investigations into the  feasibility of any
 proposed  engineering works.   (b)  land management decisions
 concerning the foreshores and environs of  the waterway.   (OA)

 *Duda,  Alfred M.   Municipal  Point Source and Agricultural
       Nonpoint Source Contributions to Coastal Eutrophication.
       Water Resources Bulletin  Vol. 18,  no. 3 (June 1982):
       pp.  397+

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                              -8-
      Several coastal  rivers in North Carolina are facing
 serious water quality problems such as surface blooms of blue-
 green algae, fish kills from anoxic water,  and red sore
 disease among fish.   Point source and nonpoint source inputs
 of nutrients were investigated.   The major  factors contributing
 to water quality problems appeared to be agricultural activities
 like animal operations and cropland in watersheds with
 drainage improvements.  (EN)

*Elkington,  John B.,   The Impact of Development Projects on
      Estuarine and Other Wetland Ecosystems.  Environmental
      Conservation Vol. 4, no. 2 (1977): pp. 135+
      The Council of  Europe declared 1976 the Year of the
 Wetland in the hope  of reaching a wider audience of sensitizing
 professionals engaged in management of estuarine areas, and
 of stimulating practical conservation projects.  Such campaigns
 are not reaching decision-makers in the developing world, and
 are being ignored during the planning stages of a number of
 major projects that  threaten the Integrity of wetland eco-
 systems.  Biology and pollution of estuarine wetlands, urban
 use of wetlands, impacts of agriculture, of tourism, and of
 recreation, wetlands laws, and conservation management of
 wetlands are discussed.  (EN)

 *"Environmental Assessment  of Water Quality Management Plans."
      Washington, D.C.  U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,
      1977.   (Memorandum)
      The function of  a water quality management plan  is  to
 improve the physical  environment.  The preparation of an
 environmental assessment WQM plan  is required  under  the
 Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972.   Methods of
 assessing environmental impacts of alternative WQM plan
 elements are presented.  Water quality and quantity,  land
 use, air quality, ecological, economic, visual,  and  social
 impact  assessments are described.   (EN)

 *Estuaries,  Geophysics  and  the Environment. Washington, B.C.:
      National Academy  of Sciences,  1977.
      As a  result of  increasing stress  on U.S.  estuaries  from
 such activities  as river  flow alteration,  dredging,  tidal
 flat reclamation, effluent dispersal,  and  industrial cooling,
 scientists,  engineers,  government  officials,  and  the public
 are becoming more aware  of the  need  to protect estuaries.
 The principal  problems that must  be  addressed to  protect
 estuarine  ecosystems are:   The  lack  of understanding of  the
 fundamental aspects  of estuarine  behavior-particularly,
 mixing and circulation;  and the  lack of a  focal point for
  estuarine  research.   Aspects of  estuarine  science,  especially
  the role of geophysics,  are considered, and hydrodynamic and
  geological processes and basic chemical and biological phenomena
  are examined.   Other topics explored include:  longitudinal
  circulation and mixing relationships,  lateral circulation

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                              -9-
 effects,  river plumes  and estuary fronts,  fjord and salt-wedge
 circulation,  and turbulent processes.   (EN)

 Ferguson, K.W.  Human  Activity and,Slope Contribution of
      Sediments to an Estuarine Basin;   Case  Study;  North
      River,  Massachusetts.  Ph.D. dissertation, Clark
      University, 1983.
      Soil erosion on slopes adjacent to the  North River
 Estuary,  Massachusetts and the ensuing estuarine sedimentation
 problems  are the basis of this dissertation.  Forest,
 agriculture  and suburban land use patterns are selected for
 analyses  of  the soil erosion and sedimentation relations.
 The following field methods and laboratory techniques were
 utilized:  (i) field reconnaissance, (ii)  slope analyses,
 (iii) soil erosion plots, (iv) photo and map analyses, (v)
 botanical identification and delimitation, (vi) sediment
 sampling, (vii) field  survey and mapping,  and (viii) computer
 simulation.   (OA)

*Galloway, Jr., G.E. Assessing Man's Impact on Wetlands.
      Raleigh, North Carolina.  North Carolina Water Resources
      Research Institute, 1978.   (Report no.  UNC-SG-78-17;  NOAA-
      79070910; PB-298-736/0)  Cosponsored by U.S. National
      Oceanic and Atmoshperic Administration, Rockville, Md.
      The first section provides a short background on Federal
 interest in wetlands and a discussion of how, when, and where
 man's impact on wetlands occurs.  The next .section focuses on
 impact assessment, first by defining the characteristics of a
 usable evaluation system and then by briefly surveying current
 evaluation techniques.  The third section proposes* the wetland
 evaluation system  (WES), the author's concept of an evaluation
 system.   The fourth section applies this model, fo-if illustrative
 purposes, to abbreviated case studies of wetland evaluation
 in the Yazoo Basin of  Mississippi and the Neuse River Estuary
 of North Carolina.  (NT)

*Haven, K.F.  A Methodology for Impact Assessment in the
      Estuarine/Marine  Environment.  Livermore, California:
      California University, Livermore, Lawrence.  Livermore
      Laboratory, 1975.   (Report no.  W-7405-ENG-48; UCRL-51949)
      The goal was to develop a model for assessing and
 evaluating the  impact  of present and future energy-related
 activities on the marine/estuarine environment.  These impacts
 can be measured in economic terms by tracing the impact flow
 out of the economic sector through the marine environment and
 back into the economic sector in terms of changes in availability
 of natural resources.   Two types of models are proposed; an
 ecological input/output model and a dynamic (difference
 equation) model.  The  ability to track lethal and sublethal,
 direct and indirect and short-and long-term effects of a
 variety  of pollutants  related to the production and use of

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*
                              -10-
 energy resources is included in the acceptability criteria for
 the models.  (WR)

 Hefny, Kamal.  Land-use and Management Problems in the Nile
      Delta.  Nature and Resources, Vol. 18, no. 2, April-June,
      1982, pp.  22+
      The magnitude and rapidity of the changes taking place
 in the Nile Delta are discussed.  This most vital part of
 Egypt's scarce, arable lands is also highly vulnerable.  The
 system of agricultural and hydrobiological production depends
 on maintaining  certain chemical and ecological balances,
 which are increasingly threatened by accelerated urban sprawl
 and the impact  of water control projects.   Management decisions
 about these complex problems should be based on continuing
 interdisciplinary study and monitoring of the Delta ecosystem.
 (EN)

*Helliwell, P.R. and Bossanji, J. -(eds.)  Pollution Criteria
      for Estuaries.  New York:  Halsted, 1975.

 Howells, G.P.  The Estuary of the Hudson River, U.S.A.
      Proceedings pJE the Royal Society of London, B. ,  Vol. 180,
      1972. pp.  521-534.
      Although each estuary contains unique characteristics,
 studies of contrasting estuaries build up a body of knowledge
 defining estuaries as ecosystems and document existing
 conditions.  A  comparative approach allows economy of effort
 and direct attack on problems of management or control.
 Although the Hudson is a major river, utilized for drinking
 water, transport, sewerage, and recreation, it has been
 relatively neglected scientifically.  Sufficient information is
 now available on the lower Hudson to formulate simple models
 usable for predictive purposes.  Information about variety
 and abundance of flora and fauna is lacking.  Water quality
 control may.be  needed if problems of fishery maintenance,
 eutrophication, and drinking water are to be avoided.  The
 processes and pathways of pollutants within this estuarine
 ecosystem need  research and study of effects on biological
 communities in  relation to concentration and time of exposure.
 Great natural environmental variations exist in estuaries and
 the flora and fauna are affected by the need to tolerate
 these variable  conditions.  Capacity of estuaries to accept
 pollutants which enhance natural variations is relatively
 great.  The best reconcilation between industrial development
 and maintenance of amenity needs to be determined.  (WR)

*Josselyn, Michael N., and Atwater, Brian F.  San Francisco
      Bay Use and Protection (Physical and Biological Constraints
      on Man's Use of the Shore Zone of the San Francisco Bay
      Estuary.)   Washington, D.C.: American Association for the
      Advancement of Science, 1982.  (AAAS report)
      Physical and biological phenomena contribute to many of

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                              -li-
 the hazards,  boundary disputes,  and environmental regulations
 that constrain shore zone development in the San Francisco
 Bay Estuary.   Most common among  geologic hazards is the
 instability of bay mud and peat  under static loads.  Providing
 safeguards against earthquakes is difficult because of
 uncertainty about fault locations and the magnitude of future
 quakes.   Boundary disputes involving ownership and governmental
 jurisdiction often hinge on the  evalution of wetlands in
 historic or present times.  Problems associated with erosion
 control  and habitat preservation are also discussed.  (EN)

*Ketchen, K.S.; Bourne, N. and Butler, T.H.  History and Present
      Status of Fisheries for Marine Fishes and Invertebrates
      in  the Strait of Georgia, British Columbia.  Canadian
      Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences  Vol. 40, no. 7
      (1983):  pp. 1095-1119.
      An  historical account is given of the development of
 strait of Georgia commercial fisheries (other than salmon)
 from their beginnings in the middle to late 19th century to
 the 1980's.  Where possible, attempts were made to explain
 past fluctuation in abundance, especially to distinguish
 natural  effects from those of fishing or socioeconomic origin.
 The review deals with commerical exploitation of herring...
 and other invertebrates. (OA)

 Marx, P.R., and Kraft, J.C.  Application of a Model for an
      Estuarine Transgression to  Coastal Planning Decision
      Making." Geological Society of America.  Abstracts with
      Programs Vol. 13, no. 3 (1981). (OA)

*The Sancor Estuaries Programme,  1982-1986.  s.l'?, South African
      National Scientific Programmes, 1983.  (Report no. 67)
      A description of South Africa's Estuarine Programme
 includes an outline of environmental problems resulting from
 human activities in estuaries, the current research being
 performed, and legislation that  relates to estuaries.  A
 program  framework is developed that outlines research needs
 over the next five years.  Research reports are divided
 according to the following types of research:  biological,
 physical, chemical, geological,  and aquaculture.  (EN)

*Sheperd, P.N., and Ames, R.W. Management of Urban Development
      in  Coastal and Estuarine Environment.  Institution of;
      Engineers, Australia.  Civil Engineering Transactj.oris  Vol.
      22,, no. 1 (February 198TJ7!   p. 41+
      Management of urban development in .a coastal and estuarine
 environment in Southern Australia is evaluated.  Specific prob-
 lems that had to be overcome to  produce an environmentally
 attractive and unique urban development are identified.  Devel-
 opment costs are discussed.  Regulation of private devel°Pment
 by the Federal and local governments is described.  (EN)  >

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                              -12-
*Tarver, Johnie W.,  and Savoie, L.  Brandt.  An Inventory and
      Study of the  Lake Pontchartrain-Lake Maurepas Estuarine
      Complex.  New Orleans, Louisiana:  Louisiana Wildlife and
      Fisheries Commission, Division of Oysters, Water Bottoms
      and Seafoods,  1976.  Sponsored by U.S. National Marine
      Fisheries Service, Washington, D.C.  (Report no. LWLFC-
      technical bulletin-19; NOAA-76111801; PB-262-413/8)
      This study was made to investigate the composition,
 general distribution, and abundance of commercially or
 potentially important fauna inhabiting the Lake Pontchartrain-
 Lake Maurepas estuarine complex, so that comparisons with
 previously completed wetland research in Louisiana and the
 northern Gulf of Mexico might enable administrators to
 efficiently manage Louisiana's renewable coastal zone resources.
 Vertebrate and macroinvertebrate populations were sampled
 with a 16-food trawl and 100-foot beach seine.  Molluscan
 benthic communities were empirically determined utilizing a
 Peterson dredge.  Zooplankton was estimated based upon
 collections accomplished utilizing a no. 2 mesh 1.8 x 0.5 meter
 net.  Hydrological  and climatological parameters were collected
 at four stations in addition to those coinciding with trawl,
 seine, Peterson, and zooplankton locations.  Grain size
 determinations were made of the upper three inches of sediment
 samples during two separate sampling efforts--one in 1972 and
 another in 1973.  (NT)

*Techniques for Evaluating the Effects of Water Resources
      Development on Estuarine Environments.  Austin, Texas:
      Texas Water Development Board, 1978.  Sponsored by Texas
      Department of Water Resources, Austin; and U.S. Office
      of Water Research and Technology, Washington,^D.C.
      (Report no. W79-03043; OWRT-C-4137 (9024)(1); PB-291-647/6)
      This research project was designed to provide a set  of
 analytical tools for water resources planners and decision-
 makers to assist them in measuring and evaluating the effects
 of water resources development on estuarine environments.
 The techniques are designed to be sufficiently flexible to
 analyze all types  of water development and management policies.
 This report describes:  (1) the techniques developed to
 measure the environmental impact of water resources development
 on estuarine environments, and (2) the application of these
 techniques to a prototype Texas river basin - estuarine system
 to demonstrate the approach of the methodology described  and
 its efficacy.  The methodology is tested through application
 to the Guadalupe and San Antonio River Basins and their
 associated estuary, San Antonio Bay.  (NT)

*Trickey, E.B., and Savage T.G.  The Development of Estuarine
      Management Information through the Application of
      Biological Monitoring Techniques: A Case Study of the
      Mobile Bay Estuary.  Estuaries Vol. 4, no. 3 (1981):
      p. 279.

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                              -13-
      Beginning in March 1980, the Alabama Coastal Area Board
 initiated a fourteen month study of the benthic community at
 eight sites in the Mobile Bay Estuary using the methodology
 developed in the Board's Pilot Study.  The preliminary results
 thus far reveal a dynamic polychaete community in Mobile
 Bay/Mississippi Sound that varies seasonally.  It is hoped
 that the full year's data will provide a baseline of present
 levels of polychaete organisms against which future trends in
 the composition and population of the polychaete community
 can be measured with understanding.  (OA)

*Vernberg, F.J.  Comparative Studies of Tropical and Temperate
      Zone Coastal Systems.  Bulletin of Marine Science
      Vol. 31, no. 3 (1981).  pp. 801-808.
      Although estuarine ecological systems are of proven
 importance to human society, estuarine studies tend to be
 site specific and restricted in scope.  A vital need is
 research on the comparative dynamics of estuarine systems from
 different climatic regions to provide a better basis for
 developing a scientific understanding of their similarities
 and dissimilarities which is essential to developing a rational
 management program.  One fundamental question is do the
 functional responses of coastal ecosystems differ between
 temperate and tropical zones in the same way the the physiologi-
 cal responses of organisms differ between these zones.  (OA)

*Warinner, J.E., et al.  An Assessment of Estuarine and
      Nearshore Environments.  Gloucester Point, Virginia:
      Virginia Institute of Marine Science, 1975.
      Estuarine and nearshore marine environments are described
 for the entire U.S., and an evaluation of water quality and
 pollution problems for the various regions is included.
 State and Federal law related to estuary protection is
 discussed.  Estuaries as an economic resource are important
 as the home of diverse fish and waterfowl species.  A potential
 conflict exists between domestic and foreign fishing fleets
 and between commercial and sport fishermen.  Water use and
 supply projections are employed to predict the enviromental
 impact of estuary use as an economic resource.  (EN)


 III. Problem Prioritization

 McGuinness, Jr., W.V.  The Delaware Estuary System, Environmental
      Impacts and Socio-Economic Effects; Annex to Volume _!;
      Management Agency Problems in the Delaware Estuary. Newark,
      Delaware; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Delaware University
      and Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1973.
      Major estuarine-related management areas and related
 problems in the Delaware estuary are identified and ranked
 according to societal priorities.  Key managers were interviewed,
 and priorities were determined from their collective views.

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                              -14-
 Management areas ranked as follows:   highest-waste disposal;
 high-comprehensive planning and management, recreation,
 institutional and legal, and shipping; medium-commerical
 fishing,  wetlands management, commercial land use, and
 residential land use;  low-water supply, shore erosion,
 preservation and aesthetics; and lowest-sand and gravel
 extraction.  Included  is a problems  matrix of four priorities,
 with fourteen problem  areas listed for each.  Under priority
 a,  for example, is included abating  unrecorded pollution,
 regionalization, unrecorded pollution loads, urban waterfront
 renewal,  wetland values, biological  implications, deep water
 ports, capability to support basic uses, land use management
 techniques, dredge spoil disposal, cost effectiveness in
 pollution control, attitudes and education, and translating
 research  into action.   Criteria for  selecting the 56 problems
 included  the number of interviewees  who cited it, the emphasis
 placed on it, the stature of the interviewee, and the judged
 significance of not solving the problem.  (WR)

 McGuinness, Jr., W.V.   Priority Management Areas and Problems
      in the Delaware Estuary; ai Survey and Evaluation, s.l.:
      n.p., 1973.  (OA)

*0sbaldeston, P.J.  Control of Estuarine Quality in the United
      Kingdom.  Water Quality Bulletin  Vol. 5, no. 3, (July
      1980): pp. 55+
      Estuarine water quality characteristics and pollution
 control programs in the U.K. are surveyed.  An estuarine
 classification system  that characterizes these waiter bodies
 according to pollution status is explained.  Sewage and
 wastewater treatment and effluent control systems ^jhave been
 implemented.  Monitoring and research projects are also
 reviewed.  (EN)
 IV.  Problem Solutions

*Bella, David A.,  Strategic Approach to Estuarine Environmental
      Management.  American Society of Civil Engineering.
      Waterways, Harbors and Coastal Engineering Division
      Journal  Vol. 101, no. 1  (February 1975):  pp.73-92.
      Ecological systems must be examined from a spectrum of
 views ranging from those of high perspective-low detail to
 those of low perspective-high detail.  Various concepts and
 approaches pertinent to the comprehensive environment planning
 for estuaries are developed.  A high perspective-low detail
 view  is employed to examine the organization, function, and
 requirements of whole estuarine systems.  A planning approach
 calling for the uneven distribution of development activities
 among Oregon's estuarine systems is presented.  A number of
 methods, concerns, and problems related to the implementation
 of  this approach are identified.   (EN)

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                               -15-
 *Cheng, Ralph T.  and  Conomos,  T.J.   Studies  of  San  Francisco
       Bay  by the  U.S. Geological  Survey.   Institute on  Environ-
       mental Science  Life  Cycle Problems  and Environmental
       Technology  26th Symposium.  Philadelphia,  May 12-14,
       1980.
       USGS is conducting a comprehensive  interdisciplinary
  study of  the San Francisco Bay estuarine system.   The  broad
  goals of  this  study  are to understand processes and rates  by
^ which water, solutes,  sediments, and organisms  interact, and
  to devleop and verify  conceptual and numerical  models  of
  these interactions.  Important sources and  sinks of various
  chemical  and biological constituents are being  quantified,
  and relative importance of river inflow,  wind,  and tides as
  transport and  mixing mechanisms  is  being determined.   The
  data  collection  program is designed to provide  data required
  for development  of conceptual and numerical models.  Near-
  monthly surveys  of hydrographic  properties  in  the  main
  channels  are being extended to include coverage in the broad
  shoal areas.   In situ  current-meters are being  used to measure
  long-term circulations in the estuarine  system.   (EN)


 *Diener, Richard  A.   Man-Induced  Modifications  in Estuaries of
       the  Northern Gulf of Mexico:   their Impacts on Fishery
       Resources and Measures of Mitigation.   Paper  presented
       at the American Fisheries Society,  et  al.   Mitigation
       Symposium,  Ft.  Collins,  Colorado, July 16-20, 1979.
     The commercial and sport  fisheries of the  Gulf of  Mexico
  are heavily dependent  on  the  estuaries of the  Northern Gulf
  Coast.  Several  anthropogenic modifications in these estuaries—
  including dumping of toxic wastes and agricultural pesticides,
  and landfilling  of estuaries  for residential and .industrial
  sites—are threatening these  resources and  the  quality of  the
  supporting habitat.  Potential impacts of each type of modifi-
  cation on the  habitat  and resource  are identified.  Mitigative
  measures  that  may be taken to offset these  impacts are discussed,
  (EN)

 *Fruh, E.  Gus;  Penumalli,  B.R., and  Flake, P.H.   Establishment
       S^f Operational  Guidelines for  Texas Coastal  Zone  Management:
       Special Report  I: Water  Quality Modelling and Management
       Studies for Corpus Christi  Bay; a_ Large Systems Approach.
       Austin, Texas:  Division of Natural Resources and Envi-
       ronment,  Texas  University at Austin, 1975.  Sponsored by
       National  Science  Foundation, Research  Applied to  National
       Needs, Washington, D.C.   (Report no. NSF/RA/E-75/054;
       PB-247-458/3)
       The  study considers  a large systems approach  to the
  problem of estuarine water quality  modelling and  management.
  The  steady state estuarine water quality model is  formulated
  as a  large scale matrix.   This model has a simple  structure
  that  is  ideally  suited to optimization methods for quantitative

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                              -16-
 water quality management analysis.   The approaches developed
 here have been applied to Corpus Christi Bay on the Gulf
 Coast of Texas.   The objective was  to minimize the total cost
 of treatment, and the corresponding variables of optimization
 were the levels of treatment to which various sources have
 to be treated.  Four optimal policies for quantitative water
 quality management corresponding to different constraint
 conditions are determined for Corpus Christi Bay.  (NT)

*Jaworski, Norbert A., and Villa, Jr., Orterio.  A Suggested
     Approach for Developing Estuarine Water Quality Criteria
     for Management of Eutrophication.  Duluth, Minnesota:
     U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental
     Research Laboratory, 1981. (Report no. EPA-600/J-81-567;
     PB82-224049).  Published in Estuaries and Nutrients,
     1981, pp. 499-516.
     A conceptual approach for developing water quality criteria
 for eutrophication management is suggested.  The three basic
 components of the framework include source ambient relationships,
 effects, and impact analyses.  T'he approach focuses on a
 conceptual method for developing decision-making criteria as
 opposed to the classical water quality criteria of a single
 value of limitation.  The approach to developing water quality
 criteria for eutrophication management provides an analysis
 framework of response relationships which can be readily
 incorporated into water quality standard-setting processes
 that include environmental considerations and technolgical
 and economic factors.   (NT)

*Johnson, M.S. and Eaton, J.W.  Environmental Contamination
      through Residual Trace Metal Dispersal from a Derelict
      Lead-Zinc Mine.  Journal of Environmental Quality.  Vol.
      9, no. 2 (April-June, 1980): pp. 175+
      A study of historic and current environmental problems
 near a derelict lead-zinc mine in North Wales shows that
 heavy metal dispersal occurs through contaminated mine drainage
 waters and episodal erosion of an unstable tailings dam.
 Since discontinuation of mining operations, an estimated
 13,000 metric tons of metalliferous spoil have been eroded
 from the mine tailings dam.  Extensive contamination of
 lowland agricultural pastures, streamwater pollution, and
 significant contamination of the flora and fauna near the
 mine are discussed.  Stabilization measures have been initiated
 as a safeguard against  further degradation of natural resources
 in the area.  (EN)

 Kapetsky, James M.  Some Considerations  for the Management of
      Coastal Lagoon &_ Estuarine Fisheries.  New York: Unipub,
      1981.   (Fisheries  technical papers, no. 218)

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                              -17-
*Kelley, Don W.  San Francisco Bay Use and Protection (Solving
      the Delta Problem)   Washington, D.C.:  American
      Association for the Advancement of Science, 1982.  (AAAS
      report)
      Major ecological problems have been caused in the San
 Francisco Bay Estuary and Delta Region by the effects of
 upstream river diversions and other water resource development
 projects.  Two solutions to the problems of reduced freshwater
 outflow and declining fishery stocks are outlined.  The first
 is to stop the diversion of water from the Delta, or reduce
 it to low levels.   The other alternative involves the effective
 design and operation of the peripheral canal to export water
 around, instead of through, the delta.  (EN)

*Lambert, Walter P., and Fruh, E. Gus.  Methodology to Evaluate
      Alternative Coastal Zone Management Policies;  Application
      in the Texas Coastal Zoney~SpeciaIT~Report III;  A Methodology
      for Investigating Fresh Water Inflow Requirements of a Texas
      Estuary; Volume IL.   Austin^ Texas:  Texas University at
      Austin, Center for Research in Water Resources, 1976.
      (Report nos.  NSF/RA-760258, PB-259-182/4)
      The study addresses the water resource management problem
 of determining fresh water inflow requirements for a Texas
 estuary.  A computer-oriented methodology provides a general,
 rational approach to the inflow problem without being dependent
 upon specific machines and computer programs.  Viability of
 the methodology is demonstrated by the use of existing computer
 models within an estuarine management scenario developed for
 Corpus Christi Bay, Texas.  The methodology has a two-step
 structure:  step 1 translates qualitative, ecologically-
 oriented management policy goals for an estuary into a set of
 net fresh water inflow requirements.  Execution depends on
 the identification of a set of indicator organisms which
 characterize the desired estuarine environment.  step 2
 produces the set of upstream fresh water release schedules
 required.  (NT)

*Lambert, Walter P., and Fruh, E. Gus.  Methodology to Evaluate
      Alternative Coastal Zone Management Policies;  Application
      in the Texas Coastal Zone; Special Report III;  A Methodology
      for Investigating Fresh Water Inflow Requirements of a^ Texas
      Estuary; Volume II;  Appendices.  Austin, Texas:  Texas
      University at Austin, Center for Research in Water Resources,
      1976.  (Report nos. NSF/RA-760259, PB-259-183/2)
      This volume contains the five appendices to this report:
 area study; calibration, verification, and sensitivity analysis
 of HYDTID and LOTRAN; computer programs; selected computational
 procedures; a compendium of experimental results generate.d
 during execution of the illustrative application of the inves-
 tigative fresh water methodology.  An extensive bibliography
 is included.  (NT)

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                              -18-
*Spofford, Walter, 0.; Russell, Clifford S.; and Kelly, Robert A.
      Environmental Quality Management;  An Application to the
      Lower Delaware Valley.  Washington, D.C.:  Resources for the
      Future, 1976.  (Research report 1)
      A study of residuals management in the lower Delaware
 Valley was undertaken.  Gaseous, liquid, and solid residuals
 were observed.  Different methods of allocating the distribution
 of costs and environmental quality that could be useful in
 making both legislative and business decisions are presented.
 Ambient standards can thus be met through varying combinations
 of strategies to distribute costs efficiently among the public
 and private sectors, among the various subregions, and among
 different income groups.  (EN)

*Wallis, I.G.,  Options for Improving Water Quality.  Interna-
      tional Journal of Environmental Studies  Vol. 6, nos. 2/3
      (1974): pp. 107-120.
      The wasteload, which is the sum of all the different
 wastes present, determines water quality.  An expression for
 the wasteload is derived in terms of five major factors —
 the number of people living in the watershed, the per capita
 waste generation, the waste treatment efficiency, the
 distribution of waste and the capacity of the receiving water
 to assimilate waste.  To improve water quality, the waste
 load must be reduced.  The possible options for reducing the
 wasteload are determined by examining the means of reducing
 each of these factors.  The algebraic expression obtained for
 the wasteload shows the relationship between changes in the
 different control options and the resulting change in water
 quality.  It is concluded that cooperation between national,
 regional and local authorities is necessary if all waste
 control options are to be used, but the regional-fcale provides
 the greatest opportunity for using these options and hence
 more flexibility for attacking water quality problems.  (WR)

*Yamauchi, H.,  Economic Evaluation of Subtropical Bay from the
      Standpoint of Water Quality Management.  Advances in Water
      Pollution Research;  Proceedings of the 5th International
      Conference s.l. n.p., 1970.
      Kaneohe Bay is used as a typical case of estuarine
 pollution in Hawaii.  Cost-benefit analysis is applied to
 water quality management decision-making.  To estimate socio-
 economic values, an attempt was made to monetarily quantify
 two of the more significant uses of the Bay (as a bait fishery
 and as a recreational resource).  These dollar values were to
 be related to the physical baseline conditions of the Bay
 and then weighed against the costs of alternative methods of
 abating discharges into the area.  Three approaches for
 evaluating the Bay as a bait fishery are discussed yet no
 satisfactory value of bait was established.  However, an
 upper  limit was set and some difficult issues were isolated.
 There are also problems in assigning dollar values to the

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                              -19-
 recreational activity occurring in the area since such
 activities have, by nature, extra-market values.  Alternative
 methods for controlling waste discharges into the Bay are
 elaborated and the least cost alternative was computed.
 Substantial cost savings can be realized by widening the
 range of physical and institutional alternatives from which
 to choose.  (EN)


 V.   Implementation

*Davis,  Gordon E.  Special Area Management:  Resolving Conflicts
      in the Coastal Zone.  Environmental Comment, October, 1980,
      pp. 4 +
      The proposed Coastal Zone Management Act amendments of
 1980 call for the preparation of special area management
 plans that provides for increased specificity in protecting
 significant natural resources, reasonable coastal-dependent
 economic growth, improved protection of life and property in
 hazardous coastal areas, and improved governmental decision-
 making.  In Coos Bay, Ore., special area management, as
 envisioned by the amendments, has evolved.  The physical and
 political context of the Coos Bay program are outlined.  The
 principles and techniques required to implement a special
 area management program are examined.  An example of how the
 question of using a large freshwater marsh for future
 industrial lands was resolved within the planning process is
 cited.   (EN)
                                                *
 Griggs, N.S.  Experience in Estuarine Water Quality Management.
      Water International  Vol. 7, no. 4 (1982): ^pp. 148-152.
      Management of water quality in estuaries is complicated
 owing to the diversity of sources of pollution and the complex
 natural phenomena involved.  Moreover, estuaries often involve
 several jurisdictions of local, regional and provincial
 governments of several states, which may complicate agreements
 of actions plans.  Action plans to improve water quality in
 estuaries can. be based on similar principles.  The main
 purpose of this paper is to examine a case study in the United
 States where such an action plan for estuary restoration has
 been implemented, with considerable political support.
 Despite the support and a great deal of scientific attention,
 signicant difficulties persist.  In order to make further
 progress, additional sums must be invested in research and
 investigations.  (PA)

*Hull, C.H.J.  Implementation of Interstate Water Quality
      Plan.  Journal of the Hydraulics Division, Proceedings
      of the American Society of Civil Engineers  Vol. 101,
      no. HY/3 (March 1975):  pp. 495-509.  (Paper no. 11177)
      The water quality control plan of the interstate Delaware
 River Basin is part of a multifunctional master plan for

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                              -20-
 water resources conservation,  development, and management in
 the 13,000-mile, four-state region.   The master plan,  or
 comprehensive plan,  is required by the Delaware River  Basin
 Compact and has the  force of law.   No project or development
 affecting the water  resources  of the basin can be undertaken if
 it is in conflict with the comprehensive plan, which includes
 policies, standards, criteria, and general goals, as well as
 physical projects and facilities,  deemed necessary by  the
 Delaware River Basin Commission for the purpose of the Compact.
 The water quality plan is being implemented by the basin
 community under the  guidance and regulatory control of the
 Commission.  Compliance is effected by:  mandatory consultative
 planning between the Commission and sponsors of projects that
 may influence water  quality; and formal detailed review of
 water-related projects 'before  construction approval is
 granted by the Commission.  (WR)

*Levinson, Amy, and Hess, Jeffery.   Conservation and Development
      in Oregon's Coastal Zone.  Coastal Zone Management Journal
      Vol. 4, no. 1-2 (1978):  pp.  97+
      Coastal zone management in Oregon is dealt with through
 the State's general  land use law,  which also regulates
 population increases, urbanization,  and preservation of
 agricultural land.  A commission having primarily local
 membership was established to  develop policies, studies, and
 recommendations about coastal  management.  The findings of
 the commission were  assembled  into a proposed coastal  management
 plan, and the staff  of the commission was absorbed into the
 state land management agency.   In compliance with the  Coastal
 Zone Management Act  of 1972, the Oregon plan is now undergoing
 federal review.  With state adoption of the plan, deadlines
 for implementation were set for local compliance. Some opposition
 to the plan has surfaced.  (EN)

 Noonan, D.C.; Rosenberg, M.S.; and Wood, D.W.  Constraints
      to Managing Interstate Aquifer.  Journal p_f Water
      Resources Planning and Management  Vol. 110, no.  2
      (1984):  pp. 191-205.
      Many considerations exist when attempting to manage a
 ground water system  that flows across interstate boundaries.
 The legal, institutional, and  technical constraints managing
 one such system, the Coastal Plain Aquifer System of the
 Delaware River basin, are described.  A groundwater management
 plan aimed at addressing the two biggest threats to the
 quality of the interstate aquifer system, synthetic organic
 contamination and salinity intrusion, is presented. The
 recommended plan includes provisions for locating future
 groundwater withdrawals away from stressed areas; developing
 a surface water supply as part of a conjunctive use scheme;
 and developing new well fields in the phreatic portions of
 unstressed areas. The plan also contains a set of policy

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                              -21-
 recommendations aimed at addressing legal  and  institutional
 problems.  (GR)

*Taylor, L.E.   Environmental Aspects of Water-Resources  Planning
      in England and Wales.  Journal of Hydrology   Vol.  51, nos.
      1-4 (May, 1981):  pp. 232-243.
      The Water Resources Act of 1963 provides  the  framework
 for the comprehensive management of water  resources  in  England
 and Wales.   This paper discusses the resultant management
 procedures which have facilitated consideration of regional
 schemes including river regulation, inter-river transfers,
 and freshwater storage in estuaries.  The  environmental
 aspects of these representative regional schemes are  discussed
 with particular reference to a feasibility study of  freshwater
 storage in the wash.  Multipurpose Regional Water  Authorities
 created in 1974 consider water resources schemes within a
 framework of priorities for other water services.  While it
 is necessary to consult the public on alternative  water
 strategies, it is also necessaxy to ensure that resources  are
 developed in time to meet increasing demands.  It  is  suggested
 that environmental evaluation of water schemes is  more  appro-
 priate for England and Wales than formalized environmental
 impact assessment, which often results in  the  presentation
 of extensive data, some of which is subjective and much of
 which appears to be of doubtful use to planners.   (WR)
                                (: '(  1'/!.•??Cental Protection Agency
                                
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