P/EPA United States Environmental Protection Agency Office of Water Washington, DC 20460 EPA 503/9-90-004 April 1990 Rhode Island Sea Grant College Program The University of Rhode Island Narragansett. Rl 02882 National Directory of Citizen Volunteer Environmental Monitoring Programs Third Edition Printed on Recycled Paper ------- This publication has been funded wholly or in part by the US EPA under Interagency Agreement DW13934084-0 with NOAA's Sea Grant Program and the University of Rhode Island. ------- National Directory of Citizen Volunteer Environmental Monitoring Programs Third Edition Virginia Lee Coastal Resources Center Graduate School of Oceanography The University of Rhode Island Eleanor Ely Rhode Island Sea Grant College Program The University of Rhode Island Contents 2 Preface 3 State Programs 3 Alabama 3 California 3 Connecticut 4 Delaware 4 Florida 5 Idaho 6 Illinois 7 Indiana 7 Kentucky 7 Louisiana 8 Maine 9 Maryland 12 Massachusetts 13 Michigan 14 Minnesota 15 Mississippi 16 Missouri 16 Montana 18 New Hampshire 19 New Jersey 20 New York 23 North Carolina 26 Ohio 27 Oregon 27 Pennsylvania 28 Rhode Island 28 South Carolina 29 Tennessee 30 Texas 32 Vermont 33 Virginia 35 Washington 38 West Virginia 39 Wisconsin 40 National Programs ------- Preface Like the volunteer environmental monitoring movement itself, this directory has grown rapidly. The first edition, published in September 1988, listed 43 programs. Just seven months later, the second edition, containing 70 entries, was produced; within 10 months, all 5,000 copies had been distributed. This expanded, updated, and revised third edition of the directory includes 133 programs. Thirty of these are brand-new programs that started within the year. During that same year many of the older programs have ex- panded, increasing the number of volunteers involved and the number of sites moni- tored, and taking on new projects. Most of the entries in this edition contain much more detailed information than in previous editions—information about specific techniques and tests used for monitoring, about funding sources, and about ways that governmental agencies are using citizen volunteer monitoring results. All kinds and sizes of volunteer monitoring programs are included in this directory. There are programs with budgets of zero and programs with budgets over $100,000; local programs involving four or five volunteers and national programs involving thousands of volunteers; programs still in the planning stages and one program (the Cooperative Weather Observer Program) that is celebrating its centennial in 1990. The citizen volunteer groups listed in this directory are engaged in a wide range of activities—partly a result of the great geographical diversity represented. There are groups in Montana monitoring the effects of mining and logging on water quality and a group in Florida monitoring the effects of boating activity on manatee populations. Water-quality monitoring for basic chemical, physical, and biological parameters is the most common activity of the groups in this directory, but there are also groups that monitor acid rain, erosion, bird populations, fish populations, or exotic aquatic weeds; groups that are primarily interested in watchdogging; groups that categorize plastic and other beach debris; and one group that monitors butterflies. For this edition of the directory, we made every attempt to contact programs not in- cluded in earlier editions. Nevertheless, there undoubtedly are many existing monitoring programs that we did not hear about, and there will surely be many new programs starting up in the near future. All users of the directory can help make future editions more comprehensive by using the form at the back of this booklet to let us know about any additional programs that should be in the directory. We wish to thank the Office of Marine and Estuarine Protection, Office of Water, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, for their leadership in funding this directory and sponsoring two national citizen volunteer environmental conferences. The first confer- ence was held at the University of Rhode Island in May 1988 and the second was held in New Orleans in December 1989. Each conference led to an expanded edition of the directory. It is our hope that the information in this directory will be particularly useful to any group or individual interested in starting a new monitoring group. Virginia Lee and Eleanor Ely January 1990 ------- ALABAMA CALIFORNIA State Programs Alabama Coastal Cleanup Alabama Department of Environmental Management 2204 Perimeter Road Mobile, AL 36615-1131 John Marshall (205) 479-2336 In conjunction with the Take Pride Gulf-Wide program (see Mississippi listing), the Alabama DEM and two other state agencies (Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs, and Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources) coordinate an annual beach cleanup. The first year (1988), 630 volunteers participated in the cleanup; in 1989, there were 725 volunteers. Data are tabulated using Center for Marine Conservation data collection cards. The results arc published in a newsletter and are shared with other agencies, including the EPA Gulf of Mexico program. Funding for the cleanup comes from Alabama Coastal Zone Management. San Francisco Bay Keeper Building A, Fort Mason Center San Francisco, CA 94123 Michael Herz John Payne (415) 567-4401 The San Francisco BayKeeper program, started in July 1989, focuses on deterrence and enforcement rather than routine monitoring. The BayKeeper uses a boat to patrol for, docu- ment, and report violations of environmental laws protecting water quality, fish, wildlife, and wetlands in and around San Francisco Bay. The BayKeeper also trains volunteers to do the same work from stations on shore or in boats or planes. Presently over 20 volunteers are actively patrolling the bay, and the number of volunteers is expected to grow rapidly. Water samples are collected whenever violations or pollution problems are suspected, and samples are sent to appropriate agencies to be analyzed for sewage or chemical contamination. The BayKeeper will assist public agencies in prosecuting violators by providing supporting data and, when necessary, will also pursue litigation independently, with the assistance of non- profit law firms. The program produces a newsletter, "BayKeeper's Log." Funding for the program totals $170,000 annually and comes from private foundation grants. CONNECTICUT Cove Watchers Tim Viscl Connecticut Sea Grant John Scilleri University of Connecticut, Avery Point (203) 445-8664 Groton, CT 06340 Cove Watchers was founded in December 1988 with the goal of developing a citizens' moni- toring program to assess long-term trends in Alewife Cove in Waterford, Connecticut. Cur- rently the program has about 20 volunteer monitors and 2 unpaid staff members. Volunteers measure dissolved oxygen (by probe), salinity (by probe), and temperature, and also collect data on shellfish and finfish abundance. Program funding is about $1,000 annually, all of which comes from private sources. ------- CONNECTICUT Harborwatch Richard Harris Long Island Soundkeeper Fund Terry Backer P.O. Box 4041 (203) 854-5330 Norwalk, CT 06855 Harborwatch was founded in 1986 and currently has about 30 volunteers and 2 paid staff. About 30 sampling stations on 5 targeted estuaries in Long Island Sound are monitored for temperature, dissolved oxygen (Yellow Springs DO meter), Secchi depth, salinity (salino- meter), nitrogen (Orion N analyzer), chlorophyll, and bacterial counts. Volunteers from several organizations, including the Long Island Sound Taskforce, Westport Nature Center, and Saugatuck Valley Audubon, work with the Soundkeeper Fund on this program. Annual funding for Harborwatch is about $5,000, all from private sources. Data are given to the state, and are used for trends assessment, nonpoint source assessments, and resource management decisions. DELAWARE Delaware Stream Watch Ashland Nature Center Delaware Nature Society P.O. Box 700 Hockessin, DE 19707 Robin M. Tyler (302) 239-2334 The program, initiated in 1985, utilizes approximately 100 individuals and groups (such as school classes and various community and civic organizations) to monitor streams, lakes, estuaries, and wetlands in Delaware. Salinity, pH, and dissolved oxygen are monitored using LaMotte field kits. Volunteers also measure turbidity and temperature, survey aquatic insects, and conduct visual surveys to locate pollution sources. Findings are reported to the proper public agencies. Funding for the program (approximately $35,000 annually) comes primarily from the state of Delaware. Data are used for watchdogging and trends assess- ment. Stream Watch produces a newsletter and several brochures. FLORIDA Adopt-A-Shore Barbara Mason Clean Florida Commission (904) 488-2756 605 Suwannee Street Mail Station 2 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0450 In the fall of 1990, the Clean Florida Commission will be starting the Adopt-A-Shore pro- gram, in which volunteers will adopt a mile of shore. Volunteers will clean their shore and keep records of the type and amount of debris collected. Florida LAKEWATCH 7922 NW 71st Street Gainesville, FL 32606 Sandy Fisher (904) 392-9613 This statewide monitoring program began in 1988 and involves approximately 200 volun- teers who monitor Florida lakes once a month for chlorophyll (colorimetric), nitrogen/ phosphorus (autoanalyzer) and clarity (Secchi disk). The program has one staff member. The Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences at the University of Florida analyzes the samples. LAKEWATCH's goals are to obtain a database on Florida's lakes and to further public education and awareness about lake management. Data are used for trends assessment and resource management decisions. LAKEWATCH's eventual long-term goal is to monitor all 8,000 lakes in Rorida. The program already has a waiting list of several hundred additional volunteers who will be able to start monitoring as soon as more funding is obtained. ------- IDAHO Friends of Perdido Bay Jacqueline Lane 10738 Lillian Highway (904) 453-5488 Pensacola, FL 32506 Friends of Perdido Bay provides additional information on Perdido Bay in conjunction with the Perdido Bay Cooperative Management Program. The monitoring program started in August 1989, and currently involves 20 citizen volunteers who monitor the following para- meters daily: water temperature and depth, rainfall, salinity (titration using Hach field kit), Secchi transparency, and dissolved oxygen (field meter). The volunteers also maintain 3 automated weather stations which they visit once per week. Presently all funding for the program comes from the EPA. The information is used by local universities, EPA research- ers, and industries to determine water quality, assess trends, and assist with resource man- agement decisions. Friends of Perdido Bay also has an education/public outreach program that includes sponsoring an environmental summer school for junior high school students, offering seminars on environmental issues, and maintaining an information center at a local library. Lake Monitoring Volunteer Program Jeffrey F. Spcncc Polk County Water Resources Division (813) 533-2151 P.O. Box 798 Bartow, FL 33830 The Polk County Water Resources Division has been studying Polk County lakes for more than two years. About 30 volunteers perform Secchi depth measurements once a week, and about 70 monitor rainfall. Data are used for watchdogging and to establish long-term trends. The program is funded through the Board of County Commissioners. Marine Resources Council of East Florida Diane D. Barile Florida Institute of Technology (407) 768-8000 ex. 8135 150 W. University Boulevard Melbourne, FL 32901 The group was founded in 1983 and is currently involved in three projects: (1) Monitoring boat activity: About 150 volunteers are involved in conducting surveys and questionnaires at boat ramps and counting boats on the Banana River and Indian River lagoons. The data will be used as a basis for developing boat speed regulations and manatee protection programs. This project is funded by the Florida Department of Natural Resources and the Florida Boating Improvement Fund. (2) Drainage outfalls survey: About 75 volunteers conduct shoreline surveys of all drainage outfalls larger than a 6-inch pipe. Results will be used for redesign of the stormwater and drainage system. Funding comes from the Surface Water Improvement and Management (SWIM) Program. (3) Water quality monitoring program: A stream and creek water quality monitoring program for several watersheds of the Indian River lagoon has just begun. Volunteers monitor turbidity (Secchi disk), tempera- ture, dissolved oxygen, and pH once per week. The data will be used by state and local governments, as well as university researchers, for establishing baselines and long-term trends. Funding comes from the SWIM program. IDAHO Citizen Monitoring Project RuthWatkins Clark Fork Coalition (208) 263-0347 P.O. Box 1096 Sandpoint, ID 83864 (See project description under Montana listing, Clark Fork Coalition.) ------- IDAHO Citizens' Volunteer Monitoring Program Jim Bellatty Idaho Division of Environmental Quality (208) 667-3524 Water Quality Bureau 2110 Iron wood Parkway Coeur d'Alene, ID 83814 This program was developed by the Idaho DEQ in 1987 and currently includes 11 lakes and one river. These water bodies range in size from 350 acres to 80,640 acres and are repre- sented by volunteers who are members of property owners' associations, environmental or- ganizations, and the Idaho Lake Association Coalition. The IDEQ approach to volunteer monitoring has been to design programs tailored to the level of interest, commitment, and financial resources of each volunteer group. The monitor- ing programs vary in complexity from simple Secchi disk transparency depth measure- ments to collecting samples for nutrients, metals, temperature, dissolved oxygen, chloro- phyll, and bacteria (fecal streptococci, fecal coliforms). The volunteers purchase water quality sampling equipment, including Kemmerer bottles, Secchi disks, and dissolved oxygen kits (HACH) or meters (YSI). The IDEQ supplies the sample containers, laboratory forms, preservative acids, and biological or chemical analyses. About 40 volunteers participate in the program. They perform field measurements at specific open-water locations, usually the deepest point of a lake or river. Sampling occurs at 6-week intervals, from April through October, and once through the ice in February. Quality assurance is an important part of the volunteer monitoring program. A Water Quality Bureau staff member conducts an annual training session for the volunteers and accompanies each of the monitoring teams on at least one sample run during the sampling season, collecting duplicate samples and emphasizing the need to collect accurate and reproducible data. The monitoring results are compiled, analyzed, and presented to the citizens in the form of an annual report. Citizens' volunteer monitoring is proving to be a cost-effective way of complementing existing monitoring programs and verifying long-term trends, and it has also been valuable for increasing community awareness of water quality protection and gaining public support for implementing water quality management plans. The state also uses the data for Water Quality Status reports and nonpoint source assess- ments. ILLINOIS Volunteer Lake Monitoring Program Amy Burns Division of Water Pollution Control (217) 782-3362 Illinois Environmental Protection Agency 2200 Churchill Road P.O. Box 19276 Springfield, IL 62794-9276 Over 200 volunteers take part in the Volunteer Lake Monitoring Program, which began in 1981 through the Illinois EPA. Illinois EPA and Areawide Planning Commission personnel provide training (including quality control), equipment (monitoring forms, Secchi disks, sample bottles), workshops, and sample analysis. Sampling is performed twice monthly from May through October. Volunteers measure Secchi transparency and total depth and collect samples which are sent to the Illinois EPA Lab to be analyzed for total suspended solids, volatile suspended solids, phosphorus, and nitrate/nitrite. The information gathered on lake water quality is published in an annual report and is used by a variety of govern- ment and private organizations. Uses include trends analysis, Illinois Water Quality reports to EPA, and Clean Lakes projects. This program has attained tremendous success by rewarding volunteers with achievement awards and maintaining contact with the volun- teers through publications, training sessions, and annual meetings. ------- LOUISIANA Dean Hawver (317) 254-2700 ex. 161 INDIANA Park Tudor Science Resource Center 7200 North College Avenue Indianapolis, IN 46240-3016 The Park Tudor Science Resource Center is currently working on three projects: (1) Water quality monitoring. Since 1988, high school students have monitored the White River for dissolved oxygen, phosphorus, nitrogen, and pH (using Hach kits). Eight students are in- volved in bimonthly sampling in the spring and early summer. They hope to combine their data with data from other schools in the area in order to assess water quality trends along the White River. (2) Butterfly monitoring. Eight volunteers (adults and high school stu- dents) each walk a standardized walk on nature preserves every week and count the number of individuals of each butterfly species that they see. The results of this study, which started in 1989, will help the Department of Natural Resources determine the effects of their bum policy on rare prairie butterflies. (3) Kestrel study. Early in 1990, a dozen volunteers (adults and students) began placing nesting boxes for kestrel (a small falcon) on the backs of interstate highway signs. The results will be used by the Division of Fish and Wildlife to monitor reproductive trends in the kestrel population. KENTUCKY Kentucky Water Watch Kentucky Division of W'atcr ISReillyRoad Frankfort, KY 40601 Ken Cookc (502)564-3410 The Kentucky Water Watch program is administered by the Natural Resource and Environ- mental Protection Cabinet's Division of Water. Launched in 1985, Water Watch promotes individual responsibility for a common resource, educates people about the use and protec- tion of local water resources, provides a recreational opportunity through group activities, and gives citizens more access to their government. The program supports more than 200 volunteers who monitor some 90 stations on lakes, rivers, streams, and wetlands and in groundwater and drinking water systems. Streams arc sampled once a month, and lakes are monitored once every 2 weeks from April through October. Techniques used include video and photographic surveys as well as biological and chemical monitoring. Parameters meas- ured are: dissolved oxygen, pH, chlorides, iron, and nitrate (all using LaMotte kits); phos- phate (Hach kit); turbidity; temperature; and bacteria. The data arc used for nonpoint source assessments, enforcement, watchdogging, and trends assessment. Funding for the program totals approximately $40,000, about 85% of which comes from public sources. LOUISIANA Barbara Coltharp (504) 342-8148 Louisiana Beachsweep Office of Litter Control and Recycling P.O. Box 94291 Baton Rouge, LA 70804-9291 The Office of Litter Control and Recycling started the annual Beachsweep in 1985 with about 100 volunteers. Last year, over 3,500 volunteers participated. The Beachsweep is conducted in two stages: First one crew picks up all recyclables (plastic and aluminum), then a second crew picks up the rest of the debris. Center for Marine Conservation survey- cards are used to record types and amounts of debris picked up, and the data are sent to the National Marine Debris Data Base. Information from the Beachsweep is used to pinpoint where debris is coming from; last year, for example, most debris was found to originate from boating, including fishing, recreational boating, and shipping. Results of future Beachsweeps will help show whether MARPOL (new legislation regulating marine plastic pollution) is having an effect. Beachsweep also has brought increased awareness to the oil industry about the use of materials (especially plastics) that can litter beaches and harm marine life in the Gulf. ------- 8 MAINE MAINE Damariscotta River Association Monitoring Program Esperanza Stancioff University of Maine Cooperative Extension (207) 594-2104 375 Main Street Rockland, ME 04841 The Water Quality Monitoring project was formed in early 1989 and began monitoring in May 1989. About 25 volunteers, including citizens from the communities surrounding the estuary and high school students from Lincoln Academy, monitor the tidal portion of the Damariscotta River estuary, including freshwater feeder streams. Parameters measured are: temperature, salinity (refractometer), pH (field meter), dissolved oxygen (YSI meter), and fecal coliform bacteria (membrane nitration). All analyses are performed by the volunteers. The monitoring program's primary objectives are to (1) document the existing water quality and assess trends, (2) identify sources of pollution, (3) use the public participation process to develop and implement pollution abatement and prevention strategies, (4) aid land use planning by providing water quality data, and (5) provide education and training regarding water quality to the region's citizens. Data from the monitoring program are being used by the legislature to help determine the reclassification of the Damariscotta River. This pro- gram is funded by grants from the Maine Department of Environmental Protection,the University of New Hampshire/University of Maine Sea Grant, and private sources, and in- kind contributions from the University of Maine Cooperative Extension. George's Rivet Tidewater Association Esperanza Stancioff P.O. Box 336 (207) 594-2104 Thomaston, ME 04861 The Water Quality Monitoring project was formed in early 1989 and will begin monitoring in April 1990. About 25 volunteer citizens from the five communities surrounding the estuary, as well as high school students, will be monitoring the tidal portion of the St. George River estuary, including freshwater feeder streams. The sponsoring organizations are the George's River Tidewater Association, the University of Maine Cooperative Exten- sion, and the the Knox-Lincoln County Extension Association. Funding is provided by the University of New Hampshire/University of Maine Sea Grant program. For parameters measured, techniques used, and program objectives please see entry for "Damariscotta River Association Monitoring Program" (above). Maine's Voluntary Anglers Forrest R. Bonney Department of Inland Fish and Wildlife (207) 778-3322 RFD3,Box3770 Farmington, ME 04938 Voluntary anglers have contributed data to Maine's fishery management program for more than 20 years. In 1987, anglers reported data on an estimated 418 waters statewide, repre- senting 55,500 angler days. They provide information on their fishing trips by three major methods: the personal fishing diary, business reply cards, and creel survey box cards. While the information voluntary anglers provide is frequently lacking in detail and is not repre- sentative of the fishing public as a whole, it nonetheless provides precise data on important fishing parameters which are usedfor monitoring perennial trends and for fishery manage- ment. The program is supported by federal grants. ------- MARYLAND Volunteer Lake Monitoring Program Webster Pearsall Division of Environmental Evaluation and Lake Studies (207) 289-7649 Maine Department of Environmental Protection State House, Station 17 Augusta, ME 04333 The program started in 1974 and has been under the supervision of the DEP since 1977. The program's objectives are: collection of a long-term database, education and public relations, and cross-communication between state and public sectors. Approximately 250 volunteers monitor Secchi disk transparency biweekly (May to October) in conjunction with the DEP's periodic sampling. On many lakes temperature, dissolved oxygen (YSI meter), and pH (Hach field kit) are also recorded. The program is funded by the state government and has one full-time staff member and one part-time. The state uses the monitoring data for water quality reports, nonpoint source assessments, Clean Lakes Program, resource management decisions, and watchdogging. This program has proved invaluable in obtaining data on lakes that otherwise would not be sampled. MARYLAND Anne Arundel County Volunteer Monitoring Program Patricia Haddon Office of Planning and Zoning (301) 280-1270 P.O. Box 1821 Annapolis, MD 21401 Estuarine tributaries to the Chesapeake Bay are monitored by volunteers at approximately 130 stations. Water parameters measured include pH (LaMotte wide range color compara- tor), dissolved oxygen (LaMotte Winkler kit), water clarity (Secchi), depth, and temperature. Air temperature, rainfall, and current weather conditions are also monitored. Funding comes entirely from the county budget. The monitoring data are used for baseline studies, education, watchdogging, and long-term trend assessment for planning development within the watershed. Chesapeake Bay Citizens Monitoring Program—Maryland Gayla Campbell Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay Kathleen Elicit 410 Severn Avenue, Sui te 110 (301) 266-6873 Annapolis, MD 21403 Seventeen sites on three rivers in Maryland—the Patuxent, Middle, and Severn—are moni- tored weekly for temperature, pH, Secchi disk depth, salinity (by hydrometer), and dis- solved oxygen (LaMotte Winkler kit). The program involves approximately 40 citizen vol- unteers and 1.2 person/years of staff time. Data are included as part of the bay wide compu- terized monitoring data bank and are used by the state for nonpoint source assessments and fish habitat studies. The program has collected quality-assured data for long-term tracking of changes in water quality since 1985. Funding for this program comes from a Public Participation grant from U.S. EPA, NOAA's Coastal Zone Management Program grants to the Department of Natural Resources, and private donations. The program is being ex- panded in conjunction with the state's Priority Watershed Targeting Project. The main goal is to restore and protect living aquatic resources in selected small watersheds tributary to Chesapeake Bay. Local, state, and federal agencies will combine their efforts, with the aid of interested citizens, to manage these watersheds for sustained improvements in water quality and other aquatic habitat values. The Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay produces several publications, including "Citizen Monitoring Manual," which contains procedures for a number of water quality tests, and "An Introduction to Water Quality Monitoring Using Volunteers: A Handbook for Coordinators." ------- 10 MARYLAND Eastern Shore Student Water Monitoring Program George M. Radcliffe c/o George M. Radcliffe (301) 228-2111 (work) Mace's Lane Middle School (301) 228-3586 (home) Cambridge, MD 21613 Students in 7 counties in Maryland monitor rivers in the Chesapeake Bay watershed for dissolved oxygen, salinity, and pH (all by LaMotte kit); phosphates, nitrates, and chlorine (Hach spectrophotometer); turbidity; air and water temperature; plankton counts; and algae levels. AH analyses are performed by the students. Students first enter the program in the 6th grade and are trained for one year by the older students. By mid-7th grade, students are able to complete the monitoring tasks without supervision. The program publishes a quarterly newsletter, "River Watch." Data collected by the students are used in classrooms for educational purposes, and to determine water quality and assess trends. Funding for the program ($25,000) comes from the Chesapeake Bay Trust. Marsh Monitoring Program Christopher Swarth Jug Bay Wetlands Sanctuary (301) 741-9330 Anne Arundel County Recreation and Parks Facility 1361 Wrighton Road Lothian, MD 20711 The Marsh Monitoring Program studies all the habitats in the 350-acre Jug Bay Wetlands Sanctuary, including streams, estuaries, wetlands, and upland forest. The program has 6 staff members and approximately 140 volunteers. The staff has developed procedure manuals for each project. Volunteer training, including quality control training, is empha- sized. Support provided to volunteers includes a newsletter, a lab on the premises, person- alized name tags, and social gatherings. Water quality monitoring is performed weekly and includes dissolved oxygen (LaMotte Winkler kit and YSI meter), pH (Corning meter and LaMotte kit), clarity (Secchi disk), total suspended solids, chlorophyll, nitrate, and phosphate. Some analyses are performed at the state lab. The program also monitors the population size, distribution, and habitat prefer- ence of fish, small mammals, amphibians, and reptiles. Weather is also monitored. Funding for the program totals about $100,000, about 25% from private sources and 75% from public sources (county). The data are shared with state government, and three of the nine current studies are linked with larger state-run or regionwide studies. ------- MARYLAND 11 Maryland Save Our Streams Deborah Ward 258 Scotts Manor Drive Barbara Taylor Glen Burnie, MD 21061 301-969-0084 (toll-free) 800-448-5826 This program, started in 1970, monitors streams, estuaries, and wetlands. Eleven staff mem- bers and approximately 1,000 volunteers are involved in the program's numerous projects, which include: (1) Biological water quality monitoring by surveying number and type of macroinvertebrates (aquatic insects); (2) Erosion control monitoring on construction sites; (3) Surveying watersheds for potential pollution sources, such as construction sites, automo- bile graveyards, landfills, and sewage treatment plants; (4) Surveying streams for potential water quality problems, such as broken sewer lines, bare banks, and instream construction activities; and (5) Training people how to organize successful stream cleanups. Some projects are done under state contracts. Funding comes from grants, in-kind contributions, and fees paid by volunteers. The program's data have been used for trends assessment, discharger compliance, determination of water quality, court cases, and new legislation. Maryland Save Our Streams was also able to successfully pressure the county government to increase its staff size. The program produces numerous booklets and brochures on topics ranging from stream monitoring to lobbying techniques, and also a quarterly newsletter, "Flowing Free." They also have numerous slide show presentations that are available to be loaned out. In celebration of their 20th anniversary, Save Our Streams has launched a new program, "Adopt-A-Stream," in conjunction with the Department of Natural Resources. Their goal is to have 5,000 stream miles adopted by Earth Day 1990 (April 22). Sassafras River Community Council Floyd E. Spellman P.O. Box 55 (301)275-8558 Georgetown, MD 21930 This newly formed monitoring program is particularly concerned with monitoring the effects of marina construction on water quality in the Sassafras River. To date there are 5 volunteer monitors who collect samples weekly. Samples are sent to Essex Community College Water Quality Assessment Lab to be analyzed for pH, nitrogen (ammonia and nitrate/nitrite), turbidity, phosphates, and total and suspended solids. The program is funded by a grant from the Chesapeake Bay Trust ($l,300/year). Upper Chesapeake Bay Volunteer Monitoring Program Diane Auer Jones Essex Community College (301) 522-1316 7201 Rossville Boulevard Baltimore, MD 21237 This program started in 1989. Citizen volunteers monitor temperature, Secchi disk depth, salinity, color (LaMotte field kit), pH (Chemetrics field kit), and dissolved oxygen (Chcm- etrics Indigo Carmine field kit) at 50 stations along the Upper Chesapeake Bay and its tribu- taries. In addition to these weekly field measurements, volunteers collect samples once a month which are analyzed by scientists at the Water Quality Assessment Center at Essex Community College for heavy metals (lead, cadmium, chromium, mercury, arsenic, and copper; analyzed by Perkin-Elmer Atomic/Emission Spectrometer), nutrients (nitrite/ nitrate; analyzed by autoanalyzer), total and fecal coliforms, volatile organics, herbicides, and pesticides. The program has 6 staff members, 50 volunteers who are involved in monitoring, and about 50 additional volunteers who work on educational projects, stream restoration, and other special projects. Data are used to monitor point and nonpoint source pollutants, seasonal changes, and long-term trends in water quality. The data will also be used by the Baltimore County Department of Environmental Protection and Resource Management for resource management decisions. Funding for the program comes from the Chesapeake Bay Trust and the Baltimore County Department of Environmental Protection and Resource Management. ------- 12 MASSACHUSETTS MASSACHUSETTS Acid Rain Monitoring Project Paul Godfrey Water Resource Research Center (413) 545-2842 Blaisdell House University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA 01003 This program has included up to 1,000 volunteers and 3,500 stations over its 6-year life span. At present, 300 volunteers test surface waters quarterly for pH, alkalinity, major cations and anions, nitrate-nitrogen, and metals. Private laboratories donate the analysis for free and are carefully checked for quality control. The results of the tests have been instru- mental in state policy-making for state emission reduction. Data have also been used for court cases, trends assessment, and resource management. Funding for the program ($200,000/year) is provided by the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife. Adopt-A-Stream Maria Van Dusen Massachusetts Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and (617) 727-6278 Environmental Law Enforcement 100 Cambridge Street, Room 1901 Boston, MA 02202 The goals of the Adopt-A-Stream program, which began in 1987, are to protect water quality and river corridor lands through local actions. Forty-six groups have adopted streams and 33 more work on local education and river protection initiatives. In 1989 the program supported pilot citizen stream monitoring on three rivers: the Hoosic, the Ipswich, and the Williams. In 1990,15 of the program's stream-adoption groups will be involved in monitoring. Parameters monitored include temperature, dissolved oxygen, pH, conductiv- ity, nitrogen, phosphorus, instream flow, turbidity, macroinvertebrates, and coliform bacteria. The program also supports projects on watershed education, land conservation, and participation in local government for stream protection. The Massachusetts Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Environmental Law Enforcement provides technical assistance to the volunteer groups. Individual groups raise their own money from private donations, usually from nonprofit sports and environmental groups. Citizens Monitoring of Water Quality in Coastal Ponds Alan W. White WHOI Sea Grant Program Brian L. Howes Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (508) 548-1400 Woods Hole, MA 02543 WHOI Sea Grant and the town of Falmouth jointly fund this program to monitor the brackish coastal ponds in Falmouth for various physical and biological parameters. Thirty- three locations are sampled monthly for color, depth, turbidity, temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, and total suspended solids. Shellfish growth potential is also studied. The program has 3 part-time staff members, 30 volunteer monitors, and 30 other volunteers. The purposes of the program are to document the present water- quality status of the coastal ponds and to provide baseline data to assess the effects of future actions for municipal planning. Hoosic River Watershed Association Jerry Schoen P.O. Box 268 (413)458-4094 North Adams, MA 01247 The monitoring program started in early 1989 and involves about 40 volunteers, including a core of about 25 who collect water samples quarterly. Parameters monitored include pH, dissolved oxygen, specific conductivity, turbidity, temperature, phosphate, nitrate, sulfate, chloride, aquatic invertebrates, and total and fecal coliforms. Data are used for assessing trends, determining water quality, and establishing baselines. ------- MICHIGAN 13 North Shore Harbor Monitoring Program Peg Brady Massachusetts Audubon: North Shore (508) 283-0598 159 Main Street Gloucester, MA 01930 Beginning in the summer of 1990, the North Shore Harbor Monitoring Program plans to monitor wildlife in the buffer zones between areas of wetland development and critical resource areas. Approximately 25 volunteers will count birds and small mammals in the buffer zones and monitor their behavior. The data will be used for research and for new land-development regulations. The program also sponsors an annual beach cleanup and litter survey, using data cards from the Center for Marine Conservation's National Marine Debris Data Base. MICHIGAN The Burt Lake Watershed Water Quality Monitoring Program Mark Fitzpatrick SEE - North (616) 539-8406 University of Michigan Biological Station Pellston, MI 49769 This program, started in 1987, involves about 80 students from three area high schools and one middle school. Students monitor rivers in the Burt Lake watershed 3 times per year for temperature, turbidity (Secchi disk), fecal coliforms (Millipore), total dissolved solids (meter), dissolved oxygen, BOD, pH, nitrates, and phosphates (Hach kits are used for the last 5 parameters). The monitoring program's purpose is primarily educational. Students compare the quality of the different rivers that run into Burt Lake and look for trends. Funding for the program is through the Northeast Michigan Council of Government. Friends of the Rouge Mark Mitchell 12763 Stark Road, Suite 103 (313) 427-1234 Lavonia, MI 48150 Friends of the Rouge is a nonprofit citizens' organization, started in 1986, whose purpose is to increase awareness about the Rouge River. Friends of the Rouge sponsors two projects: (1) "Rouge Rescue." Citizens remove debris, including cans, shopping carts, and cars, from the river. (2) 'The Interactive Rouge River Water Quality Project." Students at 40 high schools and middle schools in the Detroit area monitor the following water quality parame- ters: dissolved oxygen (Hach field kit), nitrogen/phosphorus (Hach kit), 5-day BOD, fecal coliforms (Millipore membrane filtration), pH (Hach kit), temperature, turbidity (turbido- meter), and total suspended solids. Sampling is done once in the spring and once in the fall. Funding for the program is approximately $57,000,60% from private sources and 40% from public sources. Data are given to the state but the state does not use the data. Data are used for watchdogging and trends assessment. Friends of the Rouge has also created the C.R.A.P. (Community River Action Plan) game, a role-playing game that focuses on water pollution issues and is used in social studies classes. Self-Help Water Quality Monitoring Program Maureen Hein Department of Natural Resources (517) 373-8000 Land and Water Management Division P.O. Box 30028 Lansing, MI 48909 This program, started in 1974, was one of the first volunteer monitoring programs. It has grown from sampling 46 lakes the first year to sampling 165 lakes annually. Each lake is monitored for water clarity (Secchi depth) by one volunteer. The program has one staff member. Funding is from public sources (state and federal). The state uses the data for trends assessment and nonpoint source assessments. ------- 14 MICHIGAN Tip of the Mitt Watershed Council Rob McLennan Volunteer Lakes Monitoring Program (616) 347-1181 P.O. Box 300 Conway, MI 49722 The Tip of the Mitt Watershed Council initiated the Volunteer Lakes Monitoring Program in 1984. Volunteers complete a training course prior to the start of the field season, which runs from June 1 through August 31. Currently, about 20 volunteers are involved in monitoring at 17 locations on 12 lakes in the northern part of Michigan's lower peninsula. Volunteers measure average Secchi disk depth weekly and collect samples for chlorophyll every 2 weeks.«Chlorophyll samples are collected using a field extraction kit; the filters are frozen and all are analyzed by a volunteer at the end of the sampling season. The Watershed Council and the Department of Natural Resources use the data to determine existing water quality and year-to-year variability. The monitoring program is funded through member- ship donation from lake associations and shoreline homeowners, and through various grants from private foundations. MINNESOTA Adopt A River/Creek Boyd Fuller Waseca Soil and Water Conservation District (507)835-1000 212 - 15th Avenue N.E., Box 5 Waseca, MN 56093 The Waseca Soil and Water Conservation District is developing the Adopt-A-River/Creek program to educate high school and middle school students about conservation issues. Stu- dents will adopt a stretch of river, clean it up, check the water quality, and look for pollu- tion sources. Citizen Lake-Monitoring Program Judy A. Bostrom Division of Water Quality—Program Development Section (612) 297-3363 Minnesota Pollution Control Agency toll-free; MN only: 520 Lafayette Road North (800) 657-3257 St. Paul, MN 55155 The program was started in 1973 at the University of Minnesota's Limnological Research Center. In 1978 the administration of the program was transferred to the MPCA. The pro- gram has grown from the initial 74 lakes to 480 lakes monitored by 423 volunteers in 1989. These volunteers perform lake water clarity measurements using Secchi disks, assess the lakes' physical condition and recreational suitability based on the amount of algae present, and record the number of adult and/or juvenile loons seen. The data are used by the lakeshore owners and visitors, MPCA staff (who do the trend analyses and water quality assessments for state 305(b) reports), and other governmental and academic organizations. The main purpose of the data collections is to locate "problem" lakes in the state or to detect the first signs of problems in a lake. From long-term monitoring efforts comes the capability of performing trend analyses. The sole source of funding for the program ($47,000 annually) is the 106 section of the Clean Water Act. Volunteers pay a one-time $10 fee, which includes the cost of the Secchi disk and all publications. ------- MISSISSIPPI 15 Minnesota Clean Rivers Project Dorothy Waltz Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (612) 296-4822 500 Lafayette Road—Box 52 St. Paul, MN 55155 This program was founded in 1988. In 1989,120 volunteer groups organized river cleanups and 40 groups made the commitment to "adopt" a stretch of shoreline along a river, stream, or lake. Adopting groups agree to clean up their adopted shoreline twice a year, and they are also encouraged to do other projects (i.e., planting vegetation or constructing hiking trails) along the shoreline. The state pays the salaries of the program's 2 staff members, and private sponsors provide materials such as degradable garbage bags. Data collected by this program were used to help pass a bill making illegal dumping in a flood plain a misde- meanor. The program is starting a newsletter and has published a how-to kit on organizing a cleanup activity. Wetlands Watch Tom McGuigan National Audubon Society (612) 379-3868 Minnesota State Office 1313 Fifth Street S.E., Suite 321 Minneapolis, MN 55414 Volunteer Wetlands Watchers request the Army Corps of Engineers to notify them of re- quests filed under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act for permits to fill in wetlands. Wet- lands Watchers then inspect the wetland, and if they determine that the wetland is valuable and should be saved they write^to the Corps to explain why a permit should not be granted or how the project can be changed to protect the wetland. The goals of Wetlands Watch include increasing public awareness of wetlands and their importance, preserving wetlands, and improving legal protection for wetlands. Wetlands Watch plans to expand to include a monitoring program, possibly in the next year or two. MISSISSIPPI Mississippi Marine Trash Task Force Dianne Hunt Mississippi Bureau of Marine Resources (601) 385-5883 2620 Beach Boulevard Biloxi, MS 39531-4501 Mississippi Marine Trash Task Force sponsors a number of activities. They participate in the Take Pride Gulf-Wide annual beach cleanup in the fall and also coordinate a statewide cleanup in the spring. Information gathered in the beach cleanups was instrumental in getting the Mississippi legislature to pass the first state marine litter legislation in the coun- try. An Adopt-A-Bcach program was begun in fall 1989, in which community groups adopt 1-mile sections of beach on Mississippi's barrier islands and agree to clean their section 3 times per year. The Adopt-A-Beach program emphasizes recycling. In addition, a pilot program for a citizens' marine debris survey is planned. This survey will be more scientific and yield more quantitative data than the present beach cleanups. At regular time intervals, citizens will analyze every piece of debris on a specifically defined area of shoreline. Missis- sippi Marine Trash Task Force also runs an ongoing educational outreach program, using citizens. ------- 16 MISSISSIPPI Take Pride Gulf-Wide Villere Reggio EPA Gulf of Mexico Program Office (504) 736-2780 Building 1103 John C. Stennis Space Center Stennis Space Center, MS 39529-6000 Take Pride Gulf-Wide, begun in 1987, is an annual debris cleanup and survey of ocean and Gulf beaches in five Gulf states: Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. Last year, 21,000 volunteers participated. Debris is classified according to the categories devel- oped by the Center for Marine Conservation's National Marine Debris Data Base (see na- tional listing). The program receives some public funding from EPA and other sources, and some private donations (for example, various oil companies donate bags, equipment, or money). The data are used by the states for nonpoint source assessments of solid waste and to assess beach debris loading. In addition, the data are now being used to support a pro- posal to designate the Gulf of Mexico a "special area" where ocean dumping of all solid waste will be banned. MISSOURI Joseph P. Bachant (314) 751-4115 Missouri STREAM TEAM Missouri Conservation Federation STREAM TEAM Program c/o Stream Volunteer Coordinator Missouri Department of Conservation P.O. Box 180 Jefferson City, MO 65102-0180 Missouri STREAM TEAM is a joint venture between the Conservation Federation of Mis- souri, a National Wildlife Federation affiliate, and the Missouri Department of Conservation. The program was inaugurated by a Governor's Proclamation in February 1989. Currently there are 97 groups organized statewide for a wide array of rivers. The program stresses education, advocacy, and stewardship. Groups adopting river reaches perform an environ- mental inventory to determine problems. Since the program is new, sampling so far is mainly observational, for color, odor, and clarity. The program plans to expand to sampling more parameters in the near future. Once goals are established to confront selected problems, the Department provides technical assistance; the Federation, ombudsmanship. Funding for the program comes primarily from the state. Data are given to the state and EPA and are used for resource management decisions and advocacy with decision makers. The Department views this program as an important element for their "Streams for the Future" campaign. MONTANA Bear Creek Council Box 448 Gardiner, MT 59030 Louise Bruce (406) 683-6437 This program began monitoring Bear Creek and Yellowstone River in 1989 to determine the effects of mining, municipal wastewater discharge, and rural development. Currently 5 volunteers monitor the following: temperature, pH (field meter), conductivity (field meter), nutrients, metals, sulfate, alkalinity, flow, substrate composition, and macroinvertebrates. ------- MONTANA 17 Cabinet Resource Group Jill Davies 14 Old Bull River Road (406) 847-2228 Noxon, MT 59853 In 1989, the Cabinet Resource Group started a program to monitor Stanley Creek and Lake Creek for evidence of the effects of copper and silver mining in the Cabinet Mountains, ns well as the effects of logging, on water quality in the creeks. Currently, 3 volunteers collect water samples which are analyzed for nutrients and metals (to monitor mining activities) and for total suspended solids (to monitor logging activities). Analyses are performed at the state lab. One volunteer also does stream walks to evaluate the potential impacts of Forest Service timber sale plans. Clark Fork Coalition Peter Nielsen P.O. Box 7593 (406) 542-0539 Mi ssoula, MT 59807 The Clark Fork Coalition, formed in 1984, is an alliance of individuals and organizations whose purpose is to protect and improve the quality of aquatic resources in the Clark Fork River/Lake Pend Oreille Basin in western Montana and northern Idaho. The current volun- teer monitoring project involves 25-30 volunteers who take transparency readings 2-4 times a month at 14 locations around the lake from May through October. Data are given to the state and used in conjunction with a basinwide study authorized by the federal Clean Water Act and for trends analysis and developing a watershed management plan. A new Milfoil Watchers Program will begin in spring 1990, in which volunteers will monitor the Pend Oreille River and lake bays for early signs of Eurasian milfoil infestation. Volunteer scuba divers will eradicate the milfoil where it becomes established. Lindbergh Lake Preservation Foundation Mikal Kellner HCR31 - Box 1120 (406) 443-4245 Condon, MT 59826 The Lindbergh Lake Preservation Foundation began a citizen monitoring program on Lind- bergh Lake (a pristine lake) and its tributaries in the summer of 1989. The purpose of the monitoring is to determine whether logging is polluting the watershed and the lake. Four citizen volunteers monitor for the following parameters: temperature, turbidity (field meter), water clarity (Secchi disk), dissolved oxygen, nutrients (analyzed at state lab), phytoplankton, and zooplankton. In the future the group will expand to monitoring other lakes in the Swan Valley basin. The Foundation gives the data to the Water Quality Bureau in the hope that they will bring suit to stop logging that is causing water pollution. Funding for the program comes from private contributions. Watershed Education and Field Study Program Joan Schumaker Conservation District Bureau (406) 444-6667 Department of Natural Resources and Conservation 1520 East Sixth Avenue Helena, MT 59620 This program for stream monitoring using high school students will begin in spring 1990 as a pilot project involving 6 high schools monitoring the Clark Fork River. A 3-week curricu- lum on watershed management—including water quality sampling, macroinvertcbrate survey, and physical survey of the watershed—is being developed. After the sampling portion of the curriculum is completed, students in the program will participate in a Water Congress where they will share information, discuss management issues, and come up with policy recommendations which they will share with local decision makers. In spring 1991 the program will be expanded to other watersheds in Montana. The program is federally funded through EPA's Nonpoint Source Water Pollution Control Program. ------- 18 NEW HAMPSHIRE NEW HAMPSHIRE Great Bay Watch Sharon Meeker Sea Grant Extension Marine Decent Program Ann Reid Kingman Farm (603) 749-1565 Un i versi ty of Ne w Hampshire (603) 659-5441 Durham, NH 03824 The University of New Hampshire Sea Grant Extension has a small grant from NOAA to start a pilot citizen monitoring program on Great Bay. To date there are 12 volunteers gearing up to sample at 5 or 6 locations. They will start by monitoring dissolved oxygen (Winkler method), pH (Corning pH sampler), salinity (hydrometer), temperature, and turbidity (Secchi disk), and possibly add more tests later. There will be two 3-hour initial training sessions and monthly meetings. Quality control procedures will include replicate sampling and checking results using more sophisticated equipment. A newsletter is planned. The program's goal is to increase the spatial array for the University of New Hampshire's Jackson Estuarine Laboratory's existing monitoring program. New Hampshire Lakes Lay Monitoring Program Jeff Schloss University of New Hampshire (603) 862-3848 Petee Hall Cooperative Extension Durham, NH 03824 The Lakes Lay Monitoring Program has been operating for 11 years monitoring water quality in lakes and streams. Parameters monitored include temperature, transparency (Secchi), pH (surface and integrated; by calibrated meter), rainfall amount and pH, lake level, chlorophyll (APHA monochromatic), phosphorus, alkalinity (titration), fecal coli- forms, conductivity (electronic meter), stream macroinvertebrates, and fish condition (age, weight, length, and scale analysis). Volunteers also conduct surveys of aquatic vegetation. The statewide effort samples 275 sites in 75 lakes with over 500 volunteers participating. A volunteer training program, which includes quality control training, is provided. The volunteers' data are useful to planning commissions, lake associations, the Fish and Wildlife Department, the state government (for water quality reports and Clean Lakes Program) and other planning, monitoring, and conservation agencies. Two bills in the New Hampshire House (one requiring septic tank inspections for lake homes and one limiting water skiing on lakes) utilized the information gathered by the volunteers. Funding sources include lake associations, individuals, towns, and conservation and planning commissions. New Hampshire Volunteer Lake Assessment Program Jody Connor Department of Environmental Services (603) 271-3503 6 Hazen Drive Natalie Nigro Concord, NH 03301 (603) 271-3414 The Department of Environmental Services started the citizen monitoring program in 1985 to supplement the state's sampling program. The state is able to sample only 50 of New Hampshire's 800 lakes and ponds per summer and therefore cannot establish annual trends for individual lakes. The lay monitoring program provides the data to establish annual trends and also gives information about particular water quality problems. Lakes that show a trend of decreasing water quality can qualify for federal Clean Lakes Program funds. The citizen monitoring program started as a pilot project on just one lake in 1985, and has now grown to include approximately 100 lakes, monitored by about 250 volunteers. Volunteer monitors measure Secchi depth, temperature, and dissolved oxygen (using a DO/tempera- ture meter), and collect samples which are sent to the state lab to be analyzed for pH, alkalinity, total phosphorus, color, conductivity, chlorophyll, and plankton. Funding comes from the individual lake associations and from the state. ------- NEW JERSEY 19 Weed Watchers Ken Warren Department of Environmental Services (603) 271-3503 6 Hazen Drive Concord, NH 03301 Citizen volunteer Weed Watchers use canoes or boats to survey lakes and streams for the aquatic exotic weeds milfoil and fanwort. Volunteers use photographs, provided by DES, to identify the weeds, and they notify DES of any sightings. The state-funded program, which has been in effect since 1988 and currently involves 85 citizen volunteers, enables DES to eradicate the weeds when they first appear and before they become a serious problem. NEW JERSEY American Littoral Society D.W.Bennett Divers' Environmental Log Program (201) 291 -0055 Highlands, NJ 07732 Volunteer divers (individuals and diving clubs) in the waters of the New York Bight make ob- servations and collect data on water color and temperature; visibility; currents; bottom type; dissolved oxygen (Hach kit); and types, numbers, and sizes of various marine organisms. Usu- ally 30 to 50 divers per year participate in the program, which started in 1977. The data are published annually and are used to establish long-term trends. Hotline numbers are provided for reporting of low dissolved oxygen or unusual fish behavior. When a condition of low dissolved oxygen is found, it is reported to EPA and the National Marine Fisheries Service. American Littoral Society Pam Carlson Fish Tagging Program (201) 291-0055 Highlands, NJ 07732 This is the nation's largest voluntary fish tagging program. Currently about 700 individual sportfishermen and 75 fishing clubs are actively involved in measuring, tagging, and releasing many species of inshore marine game fish. Since 1965,111,000 fish have been tagged. Tagging kits (tags, cards, needle, and instructions) are sold to volunteers for $4. The program is self- sustaining and is supported by membership dues and purchases of tagging kits. All tagging data are published in the ALS quarterly magazine, Underwater Naturalist. Data have been used by scientists for research and were used in developing a striped bass management plan in 1983. Regional offices for the Fish Tagging Program are located in New York, Massachusetts, Delaware, and Florida; call New Jersey office for addresses and phone numbers. Clean Ocean Action Cindy Zipf P.O. Box 505 (201)872-0111 Sandy Hook Highlands, NJ 07732 Clean Ocean Action, a coalition of 115 member organizations that was founded in 1984, spon- sors a number of activities to combat pollution. One of these is the Trash Attack, designed to clean up beach litter along the New Jersey shoreline. Over 300 volunteers help in collecting and inventorying plastics, glass, and aluminum found in beach litter. Trash Attack data are sent to the Center for Marine Conservation in Washington, DC, and have also been used by state and local governments. In one instance. Trash Attack results were reported in the Con- gressional Record, under the Plastic Pollution Control Act of 1987, supporting action to con- trol the amount of plastics found on beaches. About 20 volunteers monitor floating garbage and siltation from construction and development sites for the purpose of enforcing and strengthening development regulations. Clean Ocean Action also sponsors a number of educational projects aimed at specific target groups (e.g., fishermen, boaters, consumers, and educators), and publishes the "Annual Guide," a citizen's handbook on pollution issues. Funding for the program comes from private sources. ------- 20 NEW JERSEY Finn-Tech Industries, Inc. James J. Finn 7 Bay Avenue (609) 465-6552 Dias Creek Cape May Court House, NJ 08210 The horseshoe crab tagging study was started in 1987. Since that time approximately 10,000 horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus) have been tagged by many interested volunteer groups from New Hampshire to Virginia. The information obtained from the tagging program is used to map seasonal movements of the horseshoe crabs and to estimate the size of the adult population. New Jersey Sea Grant Marine Advisory Service John Tiedemann Ocean County Extension Center (201) 349-1210 1623 Whitesville Road Tom's River, NJ 08755 The volunteers in this program include citizens and members of fishing clubs, angler asso- ciations, and charter boat associations. The program focuses mainly on trends assessment and examining how land use practices along inland bays are affecting fish health and habitat. Volunteers collect data on coastal water quality twice a month from April through October, and once a month (conditions permitting) from November through March. Parame- ters monitored include turbidity (Secchi disk), temperature, salinity (refractometer), and dissolved oxygen (LaMotte kit and YSI meter). If the Secchi reading is below a certain level; a water sample is sent to a lab for phytoplankton analysis (species identification and count). The program hopes to expand to include monitoring of other indicators of habitat quality and resource health, such as eelgrass abundance, fish and shellfish disease incidence, and algal indices. Funding is provided by Sea Grant and Rutgers Cooperative Extension. Data are used by local, municipal, and state agencies for nonpoint source assessments, trends assessments, and resource management decisions. Lectures are offered to participants as a means of educating the public. Water Watch Kyra Hoffmann New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (609) 633-7021 Division of Water Resources Office of Public Participation CN-029 Trenton, NJ 08625 In two years the New Jersey Water Watch program has grown to include over 80 groups, representing several thousand members, who adopt streams, lakes, and estuaries. Activities vary from group to group but frequently include visual and chemical monitoring, litter cleanups, stream and lake improvement projects, and educational programs. A major concern of the program is increasing public awareness of nonpoint source pollution. NEW YORK Adopt-A-Stream Eileen Malloy-Desormeaux Delta Laboratories, Inc. (716) 426-0773 34 Elton Street Rochester, NY 14607 (Please see national listing for program description.) ------- NEW YORK 21 Cornell University Cooperative Extension Bill Fink 4-H Youth Development Program (718) 230-3221 1360 Fulton Street Room 515 Brooklyn, NY 11216 4-H clubs in New York City have cleaned local beaches and piers and planted beach grass on barren dunes. A group of older 4-H youth have formed a club called "Waterproof" and are involved in alerting citizens to issues that relate to water. They will also be trained to test water quality in and around New York City. A corps of 30 volunteer Master Anglers provide expertise and guidance to the 4-H youth. Environmental Management Council Charles Wilson County Office Building (607) 756-8814 60 Central Avenue Cortland, NY 13045 The Environmental Council sponsors a program in which 5 volunteer monitors collect fish samples from the Tioughnioga River. The samples are sent to a lab to be analyzed for hydrocarbon contaminants. The information is given to the Department of Environmental Conservation in the hopes that it can be used in litigation against the polluters of the river. Fort Hamilton High School Water Watch Team Thomas Greene 8301 Shore Road (718) 836-8039 Brooklyn, NY 11209 Twice a week, students from Fort Hamilton High School's Water Watch Team monitor the health of the Narrows, a body of water that is part of Lower New York Bay. Turbidity (Secchi disk) and air and water temperature are measured. Top and bottom water samples are collected and brought back to the school's marine lab to be analyzed for dissolved oxygen and coliform bacteria. Data are published in the "Water Watch Report," produced by the students, and are used for trends assessment, discharger compliance, and determina- tion of water quality. Annual funding for the program is $250. Great Lakes United Philip E. Weller SUNY College at Buffalo (716)886-0142 Cassety Hall 1300 Elmwood Avenue Buffalo, NY 14222 Great Lakes United is a coalition of groups bonded together to protect the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River ecosystem. Under GLU's umbrella are more than 180 member organiza- tions with a collective membership exceeding half a million. GLU provides the organiza- tional base for groups and individuals to become involved in a cooperative manner, to learn from each other's experience, and to understand the interrelationship of specific environ- mental hazards to the ecosystem as a whole. A number of GLU member groups are in- volved in environmental data-collection projects, including sampling fish and turtles for PCB analysis, monitoring waterfowl concentrations, inventorying natural areas, and check- ing seabird colonies for breeding success and level of deformities. ------- 22 NEW YORK Hudson River National Estuary Research Reserve Betsy Blair c/o Bard College Field Station (914) 758-5193 Annandale, NY 12504 This program is planning to establish a volunteer monitoring effort to sample tidal wetlands and tributaries along the Hudson River. Biological, physical, and chemical parameters will be measured for developing long-term trends and baseline studies. Education and special issue awareness will also be stressed. Funding will come from federal, state, and private contributions. Hudson River Sloop Clearwater Bridget Barclay 112 Market Street (914) 454-7673 Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 Clearwater is a nonprofit environmental education and advocacy organization focusing on the Hudson River and related waterways. Many of Clearwater's members participate in local chapters called "sloop clubs." Some sloop clubs conduct water quality monitoring programs, measuring such parameters as salinity, pollutant levels, and BOD. Lake George Lay Monitoring Program Mary-Arthur Beebe Lake George Association (518) 792-6112 P.O. Box 408 Lake George, NY 12845 The Lake George Lay Monitoring Program, started in 1979, uses volunteers to measure water temperature and transparency (Secchi depth) and collect samples for chlorophyll analysis. Both near-shore and mid-lake sites are sampled. The program works with the Rennselaer Fresh Water Institute, which is responsible for determining sample location, training volunteers, and performing analyses. Funding comes from an endowment from the Lake George Association Fund. The monitoring results are used by local and county plan- ning boards. The program's goal is the collection of a large body of data on Lake George, using as a resource residents of the lake basin. New York Citizens Statewide Lake Assessment Program Scott Kishbaugh New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (518) 457-7470 Division of Water—Lake Services Section 50 Wolf Road, Room 301 Albany, NY 12233-3502 The New York Citizens Statewide Lake Assessment Program (CSLAP) monitors New York lakes for a variety of physical, biological, and chemical parameters. Samples for pH, con- ductivity, nitrate, phosphorus, color, and chlorophyll are collected in Kemmerer bottles, field-preserved and filtered, and sent to a lab to be analyzed. Volunteers measure rainfall, lake levels, transparency (Secchi disk), dissolved oxygen (Nestor DO meter), and aquatic vegetation in the field. Macrophytes are collected and sent to a lab for identification. The program provides on-site training sessions, including QC training and duplicate water sampling. CSLAP involves 425 citizen volunteers representing 61 lakes; all are members of member associations in the New York Federation of Lake Associations, a nonprofit coalition centered in Rochester. The program concentrates on baseline studies and long-term trends analysis to build databases for management strategies. The results are communicated through annual reports, newsletters, press releases, and group presentations. All the pro- gram's funding is provided through the New York State budget. The state uses CSLAP's data for nonpoint source assessments, water quality assessments for individual lakes, and water quality reports to EPA. ------- NORTH CAROLINA 23 Proj ect RiverWatch Barbara Dexter Environmental Science Program (914) 251-6641 Division of Natural Science State University of New York at Purchase Purchase, NY 10577 RiverWatch participants are mainly college and high school students plus teachers, mem- bers of conservation organizations, and community volunteers. Currently about 10 different groups, representing 50 - 100 individual volunteers, are involved. Each group measures chemical and physical parameters at a particular lake, stream, reservoir, or coastal habitat in Wcstchester, Rockland, or Putnam county. All the groups measure temperature, salinity, conductivity, pH, and dissolved oxygen, and most also measure nitrogen and phosphorus. Results are compiled in an annual technical report that is made available to local conserva- tion organizations, town boards, and county agencies. As well as providing an educational opportunity for the participants, the program is designed to determine water quality and provide long-term research studies. Recently the program's data were used to have certain stream sections registered as being impacted by nonpoint source pollution, thereby making them eligible for funding from the state Department of Environmental Conservation for additional research. Funding for the program is mainly from private grants. NORTH CAROLINA Albemarle Environmental Association Carolyn Hess Box 5346 (919)426-9563 Hertford, NC 27944 The Albemarle Environmental Association was founded in 1988 to promote the conserva- tion of northeast North Carolina's environment through education and research. Water quality monitoring began in January 1989. With funding from the Albemarle-Pamlico Estuarine Study, volunteers monitor 7 local rivers and canals weekly. Parameters measured are rainfall, temperature, dissolved oxygen (LaMotte field kit), turbidity (Secchi disk), pH (LaMotte field kit), salinity (hydrometer), and nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus; meas- ured by LaMotte field kit). Monitoring for fecal coliforms will be added soon. Data collected are used for watchdogging and trends assessment. Educational programs on estuarine management are presented to government officials, civic groups, and high school students. The group also produces a quarterly newsletter and sponsors public meetings on current environmental issues. Citizen Monitoring Tom Perlic Pamlico-Tar River Foundation (919) 946-9492 P.O. Box 1854 Washington, NC 27889 This program, funded by the Albemarle-Pamlico Estuarine Study, started in the spring of 1988. The program is modeled closely after the Chesapeake Bay Citizens Monitoring Pro- gram. Data are collected for air and water temperature, turbidity, salinity (hydrometer), dissolved oxygen (LaMotte kit), pH (LaMotte color comparator), nutrients (nitrate and phosphate; LaMotte kits), and fecal coliforms. As of October 1989, over 60 sites have been monitored, from the Back Bay region of Virginia to the Core Sound area near Morehead City and Beaufort, North Carolina. At least 125 volunteers are involved. Data will be incorporated into the appropriate agencies' baseline data banks and used to track long-term trends in the estuarine environment. ------- 24 NORTH CAROLINA Currituck Sound/Back Bay Monitoring Program Yates Barber 901 W. Church Street (919) 338-3557 Elizabeth City, NC 27909 This program, founded in January 1989, conducts weekly sampling at 13 stations in Curri- tuck Sound and Back Bay. Approximately 15 volunteers are involved. They measure turbidity (Secchi), temperature, salinity (hydrometer), dissolved oxygen (fixed in field; Winkler), pH (LaMotte kit), and nutrients (nitrate and phosphate; LaMotte kits). Funding is provided by the Albemarle-Pamlico Estuarine Study and the Currituck Wildlife Guild. Data collected by the volunteers are used for resource management, baseline studies, long-term trend analysis, and education; and for evaluating the hydrodynamics of the bay area, specifically in relation to the failure of the black bass population and submerged aquatic vegetation. The Neuse River Foundation, Inc. Calvin D. Yaggy P.O. Box 5451 (919)638-6778 New Bern, NC 28561 Grace B. Evans (919) 249-1748 Volunteer citizen monitors of the Neuse River Foundation are currently conducting weekly water sampling at 12 locations on the lower Neuse River watershed, in estuaries, rivers, and streams, in a program designed to provide essential information for the Albemarle-Pamlico Estuarine Study. The monitoring is coordinated by Tom Perlic of the Pamlico-Tar River Foundation and funded jointly by the EPA and the state of North Carolina. About 40 trained volunteers monitor dissolved oxygen (LaMotte kit), pH, nutrients (phosphates and nitrates; kit), salinity (salinometer), turbidity (Secchi), temperature, water conditions, rainfall, and wind. In addition, fecal coliforms are monitored at 3 sites. The data from the monitoring program are used by the Albemarle-Pamlico Estuarine Study for research and management purposes, and by state environmental offices. North Carolina Stream Watch Jim Mead Division of Water Resources (919) 733-4064 North Carolina Department of Natural Resources and Community Development P.O. Box 27687 Raleigh, NC 27611 This program, initiated in 1983, is becoming an established way for citizen groups to become involved in water quality monitoring, cleanups, stream corridor planning, and community education. Stream Watch is coordinated through a central office with contacts at seven regional offices. Statewide gatherings and a quarterly newsletter help provide conti- nuity and allow communication with the more than 100 groups. Some groups perform chemical monitoring; others perform biological monitoring. Sampling is done at least once per month. Parameters monitored vary from group to group and may include: macroin- vertebrates (identification of particular species), dissolved oxygen, BOD, temperature, pH, nitrogen and phosphorus (using kits), sediment (Imhoff cones), and fecal coliforms (field kit). Data are used for trends assessment and to flag problems that need further investiga- tion. The state uses the data for water quality reclassifications. Currently Stream Watch has no grant funds to dispense to groups. ------- NORTH CAROLINA 25 Swannanoa River Stream Watch Juliet Webster 701 Warren Wilson Road (704)298-3325 ex. 250 Swannanoa, NC 28778 Warren Wilson College's Swannanoa River Stream Watch was developed in the early 1980s to monitor the streams and rivers around Swannanoa, North Carolina. Approximately 9 students are currently working on environmental education projects in local schools and monitoring pH and dissolved oxygen in local rivers and streams. Funding is from state and federal sources, and data are used for resource management and trends assessment. Volunteers' Water Information Network Peter Gregutt French Broad River Foundation (704) 252-1097 70 Wood fin Place, Suite 327 Asheville, NC 28801 The Volunteers' Water Information Network was started in the summer of 1989 as a pilot program to involve area residents in collecting data to monitor the health of the county river system and to help state and county agencies diagnose and prevent water quality problems. Presently, 20 volunteers perform monitoring once per month. They measure settleable solids using Imhoff cones and collect water samples to be sent to the University of North Carolina Environmental Quality Institute laboratory (which has a contract with the French Broad River Foundation) to be analyzed for ammonia, nitrate, phosphorus, total suspended solids, conductivity, alkalinity, pH, and metals. The program hopes to add temperature and dissolved oxygen measurements, and perhaps some biological testing, in the near future. Data are used for trends assessment and determination of water quality, and to assist local planning and hazardous waste offices. Western North Carolina Alliance Mary Sauls Kelly P.O. Box 18087 (704) 258-8737 Asheville, NC 28814 Year-round sampling is done at 40 stations throughout the Little Tennessee watershed. Sampling is done weekly and also immediately following unusual rain events. Fifty volun- teers collect water samples which are then analyzed by a local high school chemistry class using LaMotte turbidity kits. An Index of Biological Integrity is done at each station to rate the overall health of the stream based on numbers and diversity of fish and macroinverte- brates present. Information is being collected to assess the water quality in each tributary within the watershed in relation to land use practices and pollution along its length, and to determine the contribution of the tributaries to the overall water quality of the river basin. Materials and the part-time salary of a consultant are paid for by a grant from TVA and support from the Western North Carolina Alliance. White Oak River Chapter, Izaak Walton League of America Richard W. Armstrong Star Route 44A (919)393-2645 Swansboro, NC 28584 The purpose of this organization is to protect the White Oak River of the North Carolina coastal plain from pollution. At present a large portion of the river is undeveloped. The 8 to 10 volunteers are active canoeists and sportsmen who use the river and who are watching for abuses along the river, such as illegal dredging, filling of wetlands, and timbering practices that hinder navigation on the river. The group's primary focus is on watchdogging to prevent wetlands abuse. The program's goal, besides routine surveillance, is to have the river accepted in the Federal Wild and Scenic River Program and in the North Carolina State Natural and Scenic River Program. ------- 26 OHIO OHIO NEFCO Claude Custer 969 Copley Road (216)836-5731 Akron, OH 44320-2992 NEFCO (Northeast Ohio Four County Regional Planning and Development Organization) started a monitoring program in 1988 and currently has 53 citizen volunteers monitoring 56 lakes in the four-county region. The volunteers measure temperature, transparency (Secchi disk), and water depth and color, as well as noting wind direction and cloud cover. They also perform recreational suitability evaluations. The information is used for education, trends assessment, and dean Lakes Program studies. Funding for the program comes from federal appropriations under the Clean Water Act, with matching funds from the county. The federal Soil Conservation Service/Soil and Water Conservation District works with the monitoring program in order to collect baseline data on lakes to judge the effect of soil erosion control measures. Ohio Scenic River Stream Quality Monitoring Program John Kopec Ohio Department of Natural Resources (614) 265-6458 Division of Natural Areas and Preserves Building 1889, Fountain Square Court Columbus, OH 43224 Volunteers monitor the stream quality in 10 state-designated scenic rivers 3 times a year by identifying macroinvertebrates (aquatic insects). Assessment of stream health is based on assigning point values to 20 taxa of macroinvertebrates depending on their tolerance to levels of pollution. In 1988 alone, over 5,000 volunteers monitored 150 stations along Ohio streams. Annual funding for the program totals $25,000 - $30,000 and includes money gener- ated by the state income tax refund check-off program and from general revenue funds and grants. The program started in 1983 and provides information for baseline studies and long- term trends. Publications include a monitoring manual and an annual report. Expansion of the program to other streams in the state has begun, through sub-administration by soil and water conservation districts, universities, and other organizations. Ohio Waterway Sweep Program Chet C. Chancy Ohio Department of Natural Resources (614) 265-6407 Division of Litter Prevention and Recycling 1939 Fountain Square, Building E-l Columbus, OH 43224 The Ohio Department of Natural Resources, the Division of Litter Prevention and Recycling, and the Division of Watercraft coordinate and conduct approximately 40 waterway litter sweeps each year. Volunteer groups clean river banks and lake shores. The total tonnage collected and the number of tires and other large items (e.g., refrigerators, stoves, and cars) are published in an annual report and sent to county coordinators. The Ohio Waterway Sweep Program was established in 1985 and has involved several governmental agencies and conservation groups, and nearly 75,000 volunteers. ------- PENNSYLVANIA 27 OREGON Company's Coming Beach Cleanup Peter D. Bond Oregon State Parks and Recreation Department (503) 378-5012 525 Trade Street SE Salem, OR 97310 The Company's Coming ocean beach cleanup is hosted annually in the spring by Oregon State Parks. The one-day event is coastwidc and is usually scheduled to coincide with the spring school break and low tides. Corporate sponsors provide publicity, trash bags, and volunteer incentives. Church groups, civic groups, and boy and girl scout clubs are asked to sign up in advance for particular beaches. An Adopt-A-Beach program was started in 1987 and currently involves 25 groups. Groups clean up their adopted section of beach twice a year and also report to the Parks Department on erosion or other conditions on the beach. Get the Drift and Bag It Cliff Hamilton Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (503) 229-5409 P.O. Box 59 Portland, OR 97207 Every year since 1984, approximately 2,500 volunteers have cleaned Oregon's 325 miles of coastal beaches. Stressing the importance of beach cleanups and the adverse effect on wildlife keeps the volunteer response high. The program has provided information for federal and state legislation related to plastic recycling and handling of solid waste at fishing ports. Private sources have funded the beach cleanup effort. PENNSYLVANIA Alliance for Acid Rain Monitoring (ALLARM) Candie Wilderman Environmental Studies Program (717) 245-1573 Dickinson College Carlisle, PA 17013 ALLARM's goals are to monitor the effects of acid rain by collecting baseline data on pH and alkalinity in streams and lakes in Pennsylvania, and to educate the public through lectures, workshops, conferences, and publications. The program, which started in January 1988, has 100 volunteer monitors who sample once a week for pH and alkalinity and over 200 other volunteers who collect samples on a less frequent basis. The volunteers use field kits manufactured by Hawk Creek Laboratories. Data are used for trends assessment, nonpoint source assessments, court cases, watchdogging, and new legislation. The program has 5 staff members, produces a newsletter, and provides training for volunteers. All funding comes from private sources, including grants, in-kind contributions, and member- ship dues. Chesapeake Bay Citizens Monitoring Program—Pennsylvania Gayla Campbell Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay Kathleen Ellett 410 Severn Avenue, Suite 110 (301) 266-6873 Annapolis, MD 21403 Eight sites on the Conestoga River are monitored weekly for air and surface water tempera- ture, water clarity (Sccchi disk), pH (LaMotte color comparator kit), dissolved oxygen (LaMotte titration kit), and nitrate-nitrogen, as well as current weather conditions. Funding for this program comes from a Public Participation grant from U.S. EPA and NOAA's Coastal Zone Management Program grant to the Maryland Department of Natural Re- sources. Data are included as part of the baywide computerized monitoring data bank. The program has collected quality-assured data for long-term tracking of changes in water quality since October of 1986. ------- 28 RHODE ISLAND RHODE ISLAND Salt Pond Watchers Virginia Lee Coastal Resources Center (401) 792-6224 Graduate School of Oceanography University of Rhode Island Narragansett,.RI 02882 Since 1985,50 Salt Pond Watchers have monitored the effects of development on 7 estuarine bays in Rhode Island. Volunteers test the waters biweekly for temperature, dissolved oxygen (LaMotte kit), salinity (salinometer), and turbidity (Secchi disk), and collect water samples for chlorophyll, nutrient, and fecal coliform testing at university, state, and federal labs. Volunteers also check for eelgrass-wasting disease, conduct waterfowl counts, and measure rainfall. Results are used by state and municipal government agencies for shellfish closures, zoning changes, wastewater management policies, and state water quality reports for EPA. The program's goals are to develop long-term trends for use in management deci- sions and research and to foster a sense of stewardship for these resources. Volunteers assist with coordination, data management, and editing a quarterly newsletter, "Salt Ponds." Funding ($30,000) is from Rhode Island Sea Grant with in-kind contributions from URI, the Rhode Island Department of Health, and the Federal Food and Drug Administration. Watershed Watch Program Linda Taylor Green Department of Natural Resources Science (401) 792-2495 210B Woodward Hall University of Rhode Island Kingston, RI02881-0804 This monitoring program, begun in May 1988, is an integral part of the Department of Natural Resources Science Cooperative Extension program in soil and water resource man- agement. There are monitoring stations on 22 ponds and lakes and 4 streams. Sixty volun- teers measure biweekly parameters including Secchi depth (view tube), chlorophyll (fluorometric method), dissolved oxygen (Hach or LaMotte kits calibrated against a YSI meter), and temperature. In addition, total and dissolved phosphorus, nitrate-nitrogen, and chloride (by rapid flow analyzer), calcium, magnesium, and sodium (by atomic absorption spectroscopy), total suspended solids (gravimetric analysis), pH, and alkalinity are meas- ured 3 times a season at 1 and 5 meter depths. All standard laboratory methods are done at the University of Rhode Island. Support for the program comes from URI Cooperative Extension and Water Resources Center, Rhode Island Department of Environmental Man- agement, and individual watershed councils. The program is developing a 5-session short course on water quality issues and concerns as well as a number of educational materials on identification and mitigation of water quality problems. Training is also provided in con- ducting shoreline surveys to document existing conditions and to identify sources of pollu- tion. Results of monitoring and shoreline surveys are used by local watershed associations and municipal conservation commissions to protect and manage surface water resources. SOUTH CAROLINA Harbor Watch Mel Goodwin Charleston Harbor Estuary Committee (803) 727-2078 c/o South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium 287 Meeting Street Charleston, SC 29401 The Harbor Watch program was founded in 1989 to improve the spatial and temporal cov- erage of the state's ambient water quality monitoring program and to develop baseline data on the estuary. Fifty volunteers were active in the first year of monitoring. Initial monitoring parameters include dissolved oxygen (Winkler method or YSI meter), temperature, salinity (hydrometer), and fecal coliforms. Some nutrients may be added in the future. Sponsors for the program are: South Carolina Sea Grant, South Carolina Department of Health and Envi- ronmental Control, Cooperative Extension Service, and local businesses. ------- TENNESSEE 29 TENNESSEE Adopt-A-River Rob Skinner Tennessee Scenic Rivers Association (615) 665-9292 P.O. Box 159041 Greg Denton Nashville, TN 37215 (615) 741-6623 Adopt-A-River, a part of the Tennessee Scenic Rivers Association, is a program of approxi- mately 150 volunteers who regularly monitor the streams, lakes, rivers, and wetlands of Tennessee. Their activities include cleaning up debris; sampling dissolved oxygen, tempera- ture, and pH; and keeping a photographic record of each body of water. Informal coordina- tion with other citizen monitoring programs is maintained. TVA Citizen Water Quality Monitoring Program Jan Strunk Tennessee Valley Authority (615) 751-8637 Water Quality Department 2S-270C Haney Building 311 Broad Street- Chattanooga, TN 37402-2801 The Tennessee Valley Authority started a pilot program in 1988 using 75 lakcshore residents and sportspeople to monitor temperature (meter), dissolved oxygen (meter), and water clarity (Secchi disk) and make observations on weather and wind conditions in reservoir embayments. The program is expected to include about 10 reservoirs in 1990. Additional reservoirs are added annually. A federal budget of approximately $50,000 has been estab- lished for this program. TVA Teacher/Student Water Quality Monitoring Network Jan Strunk Tennessee Valley Authority (615) 751-8637 Water Quality Department Linda Fowler 2S-270C Haney Building (615) 632-1759 311 Broad Street Chattanooga, TN 37402-2801 The Tennessee Valley Authority started this program in 1986 to develop basic water quality data on small streams and lakes in the Tennessee Valley and to incorporate water quality management concepts into the secondary school curriculum. Twenty-four active teacher volunteers lead their classes in collecting data on dissolved oxygen, pH, iron, nitrogen, phosphorus, manganese, chloride, and fluoride (using a modified LaMotte standard pollu- tion kit) and keeping counts of benthic macroinvertebrates. The Network is funded through federal appropriations to TVA's Water Resources and Ecological Monitoring Program. The Water Quality Department directs the project, with assistance from TVA's Environmental Education program. Administrative and logistical support is provided by the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga under contract to TVA. ------- 30 TEXAS TEXAS Clear Clean Colorado River Association Mark Wieland Colorado River Watch Network (512) 462-1588 3116 S. Congress Avenue Austin, TX 78704 The Colorado River Watch Network, founded in November 1988, is an educational program involving 10 high schools and junior high schools, 35 teachers, and approximately 250 stu- dents. Students monitor nitrogen, phosphorus, and dissolved oxygen (using Hach kits); pH (by pocket meter); fecal coliforms (by filtration and incubation); macroinvertebrates (identi- fication of indicator organisms); total suspended solids (by oven evaporation and weigh- ing); turbidity; temperature; BOD; and some heavy metals. The student monitoring has not been done at regular locations or times and its purpose has been primarily educational. However, adult citizen monitoring on a regular basis at 20 stations along the Colorado River began in January 1990. Data are used for trends assessment, discharger compliance, and water quality determination. The program has 2 staff members. Annual funding for the program totals about $30,000 and comes from member donations and grants from private agencies. Environmental Education Program Joey Crumley City of Austin (512)499-2658 Environmental and Conservation Services Department P.O. Box 1088 Austin, TX 78767 Volunteers and student interns assist in data entry and analysis, field work, and clerical duties in several programs, including water quality, ecology, air quality, energy conserva- tion, recycling, and community beautification. Also, volunteers help with three annual events: (1) Household Chemical Collection Day, (2) Volunteer Vehicle Emissions Testing, and (3) Austin Clean Sweep. The department also operates an "Environmental Hot Line" for citizen watchdogging. The department recently received a Clean Lakes Grant from EPA for Town Lake, and volunteers will be used to assist in related water quality monitoring activities. Galveston Bay Foundation Linda Shead 3027 Marina Bay Drive, Suite 110 (713) 334-3665 League City, TX 77573 The Galveston Bay Foundation organized a volunteer Spill Watch Committee following the national and local oil spills of spring and summer 1989. The committee consists of approxi- mately a dozen residents along Galveston Bay who monitor the size and extent of oil spills and the effectiveness of spill cleanups in their area. Data are passed on to the U.S. Coast Guard and Texas Water Commission and will be used to improve structures for agency spill response. ------- TEXAS 31 Pecos River Watch Project Renee Carlson Texas Water Commission (512) 463-8028 P.O. Box 13087 - Public Information Austin, TX 78711 The Pecos River Watch was organized in 1989 by the state water pollution control agency, in response to local citizens' concerns following annual fish kills in recent years on over 650 river kilometers. The fish kills were caused by the toxic alga Prymnesium parvum. Currently, 10 citizen volunteers are monitoring parameters that may control the growth of the alga and its effects on the fish community in this remote river basin. These parameters are: flow (visual estimate), temperature, pH (meter or paper), conductivity (Beckman conductivity meter), dissolved oxygen (Winkler titration), chloride (Hach field kit or conductivity meter), color (visual comparison to color cards), fish (visual observation), and plankton (microscopic analysis of a grab sample). Quality control is maintained by intercalibration at annual train- ing sessions and periodic coincidental sampling with the state monitoring program. The state provides sample containers and some equipment, and some of the samples are sent to the state lab for analysis. The state uses the volunteers' data for preparing water quality reports to submit to EPA, and for water quality trends assessment and resource management deci- sions. Texas Adopt-A-Beach Program Angela Farias General Land Office (512) 463-5108 1700 N. Congress, Room 735 toll-free; TX only: Austin, TX 78711-1495 (800) 85-BEACH The Texas General Land Office initiated the Adopt-A-Beach Program in 1986. The program was established to raise awareness of the quantity and sources of trash on Texas beaches, to build public support for regulatory measures to combat marine debris, and to change public behavior. The program recruits volunteers to adopt one-mile stretches of beach. Each group cleans up its section 3 times per year and collects data on the type of trash picked up. Cur- rently, 180 groups, representing a total of 5,000 volunteers, have adopted all 172 miles of accessible beach in Texas. Texas Adopt-A-Beach also sponsors statewide beach cleanups held each spring and fall. The fall cleanup is part of the Take Pride Gulf-Wide initiative. Since 1987,39,000 volunteers have removed 1,200 tons of trash in statewide cleanups. Data col- lected by cleanup volunteers were instrumental in the ratification of MARPOL Annex V, which prohibits ocean dumping of plastics worldwide. Texas Coastal Cleanup, "Be a Beach Buddy" Linda Maraniss Gulf States Regional Office (512) 477-6424 Center for Marine Conservation 1201 West 24th Street Austin, TX 78705 Since 1986, this Gulf Coast beach cleanup effort has been an annual event which in 1989 drew over 8,500 volunteers. They covered over 164 miles of beaches collecting and inventorying trash. In just 3 hours volunteers collected 158 tons of trash. The annual cleanups are co- ordinated with the Texas Adopt-A-Beach Program and data are stored as part of the national Center for Marine Conservation database. Reports from these efforts were used in U.S. Senate Ratification of Annex V of the 1987 MARPOL Treaty. Environmental awareness is a key in motivating volunteers to help with the trash pick-up. Funding from private, corporate, and educational sources all support the efforts of this program. ------- 32 VERMONT VERMONT Northeast Kingdom River Monitors Jim Kellogg Agency of Environmental Conservation Laboratory (802) 828-3369 6 Baldwin Street Montpelier,VT 05602 Sixty volunteers monitor acidification of many of Vermont's rivers. Volunteers choose the river and location that they will monitor and take monthly measurements of temperature and pH (meter). A database is being collected to establish rates of acidification and current conditions of the rivers for trends assessment and resource management decisions affecting the rivers. The Milfoil Watchers Program Ann Bove Department of Environmental Conservation (802) 244-5638 Water Quality Division 103 S. Main Street Waterbury,VT 05676 The Milfoil Watchers Program is a statewide effort begun in 1987. Volunteers assist the De- partment of Environmental Conservation in conducting annual searches for the nuisance aquatic weed Eurasian milfoil. Over 100 trained watchers agree to monitor 45 lakes where milfoil populations have not yet become established. Volunteers are trained by the DEC in Eurasian milfoil identification and search methods. Early detection of Eurasian milfoil infestations by volunteers means an easier, less expensive eradication effort by the state. River Watch Network Jack Byrne 153 State Street (802) 223-3840 Montpelier,VT 05602 (Please see national listing for program description.) Vermont Acid Precipitation Monitoring Program Jim Kellogg Agency of Environmental Conservation Laboratory (802) 828-3369 6 Baldwin Street Montpelier,VT 05602 This statewide, state-supported program started in 1980. Currently 12 volunteers are in- volved. Using high-quality pH meters supplied by the program, volunteers test the pH of precipitation (rain or snow). They also measure the amount of precipitation. The informa- tion is used by the EPA, the state of Vermont, and weather bureaus. Often local radio stations include precipitation pH data in weather reports. Program goals include determin- ing acid precipitation trends over time and spatial trends throughout the state. ------- VIRGINIA 33 Vermont Lay Monitoring Program Susan Warren Department of Environmental Conservation (802) 244-5638 Water Quality Division 103 S. Main Street Waterbury, VT 05676 Vermont's Lay Monitoring Program, begun in 1979, has collected water quality data on 60 lakes and 30 Lake Champlain stations. Since nutrient enrichment caused by human activi- ties is the primary threat to Vermont's lake water quality, the program emphasizes measur- ing water quality parameters that relate to increased nutrient enrichment. Baseline data are collected for chlorophyll concentration (EPA fluorometric method), total phosphorus, and Secchi disk transparency. The program has one half-time staff member, 2 summer assis- tants, and about 70 volunteers. The funding for the program, approximately $26,000 yearly, comes from the state Water Quality General Fund. The state uses the volunteer monitoring data for resource management decisions (data were used as the basis for obtaining a federal grant to conduct a watershed study on Lake Champlain) and for new legislation (data are being used to set water quality standards for the state). The program publishes a biannual newsletter and an annual report. VIRGINIA Chesapeake Bay Citizens Monitoring Program—Virginia Billy Mills Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay (804) 225-4355 903 Ninth Street Office Building Kathleen Ellett Richmond, VA 23219 (301) 266-6873 Forty-two sites on 4 rivers in Virginia—the James, York, Rappahannock, and Piankatank—- are monitored weekly for temperature, pH (LaMotte indicator kit), Secchi disk depth, salinity (hydrometer), ammonia (LaMotte kit), and dissolved oxygen (LaMotte titration kit). Volunteers also fill out a wildlife observation form, including species observed, number, location, habitat, etc. Data are included as part of thebaywide computerized monitoring data bank. The program has collected quality-assured data for long-term tracking of changes in water quality since 1985. Volunteers will be recruited for sites on the Chicka- hominy and Elizabeth rivers in 1990. Funding for this program comes from a Public Partici- pation grant from U.S. EPA, NOAA's Coastal Zone Management Program grants to the Council on the Environment, and private donations. Chesapeake Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve System Carroll N. Curtis Virginia Institute of Marine Science (804) 642-7156 College of William and Mary Gloucester Point, VA 23062 Environmental monitoring is done on Virginia's estuarine research reserves by 7 volunteers. Water quality testing of turbidity (Secchi disk), temperature, salinity (hydrometer), and pH and dissolved oxygen (LaMotte kits) is done in coordination with the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay. Bird counts are taken on the reserve by a local bird expert. Volunteers assist a VIMS staff member in vegetation sampling along a continuous transect across marsh and upland forest. The primary goal of the monitoring program is environmental characterization of the research reserve land and waters. Another goal is to collect data for use in resource management of the area by state and federal authorities. Support comes from the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, and NOAA. ------- 34 VIRGINIA Friends of the North Fork Shenandoah River Garland C. Hudgins P.O. Box 746 (703) 459-8550 115 W. Court Street (703) 436-3518 Woodstock, VA 22664 This organization, started in early 1988, now has a monitoring team of approximately 50 members engaged in both chemical and biological testing of the North Fork of the Shenan- doah River and its major tributaries. Volunteers measure pH in the field (Hach kit); collect water samples which are later analyzed for dissolved oxygen, alkalinity, hardness, nitrate- nitrogen, ammonium-nitrogen, ammonia, carbon dioxide, phosphates, and phosphorus by a core group of volunteers, using Hach kits; and conduct benthic surveys for macroinverte- brates. The volunteers' results are used by the Virginia Water Control Board and the local health authorities to identify point and nonpoint source pollution, to determine water quality in the river basin, to focus public attention on the relationship between ground and surface water contamination, and to develop baseline studies for use in research, education, and water resource management decisions. Funding comes from membership dues, local civic organization contributions, and grants from Prudential Insurance and the Virginia Environmental Endowment. Friends of the Rappahannock Warren E. Wise Citizen Monitoring Program (703) 373-3448 108 Wolfe Street Fredericksburg, VA 22401 The Friends of the Rappahannock water quality monitoring program began in the spring of 1989. Currently, 21 volunteers use LaMotte kits to monitor 14 sites on the Rappahannock River for dissolved oxygen, pH, nitrates, phosphates, water clarity, and temperature. Re- cently, the volunteers have also been monitoring a kerosene spill that occurred on the river in December 1989. Funding and support for 5 of the monitoring sites is provided by the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay. The rest of the monitoring is funded through a combina- tion of membership donations, corporate sponsors, and a grant from the Virginia Environ- mental Endowment. The Rappahannock is a pristine river that is experiencing tremendous development pressure. The goal of the Friends of the Rappahannock is to collect data while the river's water quality is still high so that, if a declining trend becomes apparent, they will be able to use the data to protect the river from overdevelopment. Izaak Walton League of America Frank Dicesare Warren County Chapter Save Our Streams Program 718 Old Sawmill Road Front Royal, VA 22630 the "Save Our Streams" program was founded in the 1970s by the Izaak Walton League of America. The Warren County chapter monitors the Shenandoah River within the limits of Warren County to establish water quality trends. Ten to 15 volunteers test pH and dissolved oxygen (using field kits) and survey macroinvertebrates. When indicated, samples for further analysis are also collected. Recently, the volunteer monitors collected water and sediment samples from the vicinity of the Avtex Fibers plant in Front Royal and sent them to a lab to be analyzed for PCBs, zinc, and manganese. The results were given to interested groups, including EPA and the state Water Control Board, and played a role in the revoca- tion of the plant's water discharge permit. The chapter also sponsors a regular litter cleanup campaign and has "adopted" one of the local highways. ------- WASHINGTON 35 Smith Mountain Lake Lay Monitoring Program Carolyn Thomas Life Science Division (703) 365-4368 Ferrum College Ferrum, VA 24088-9001 Smith Mountain Lake is a 20,000-acre pump-storage hydroelectric reservoir located on the Roanoke River. The monitoring program began in 1986 with 15 volunteers who measured Secchi depth at 45 stations weekly from Memorial Day to Labor Day. Since that time, the program has expanded to 85 stations, 33 of which arc also sampled for chlorophyll and phosphorus; analysis on frozen integrated and filtered samples is done at the Ferrum College lab. Quality of sampling is assured by sending out standards and blanks to volun- teers on a rotating basis and doubling up volunteers on stations for replicate samples. Con- tact is kept with the volunteer monitors by newsletters, regular meetings, and social events. The monitoring results are used to advise the planning district through the Policy Advisory Board, to write water quality reports for EPA, and for resource management decisions. WASHINGTON Adopt a Beach KenPritchard Dexter Horton Building Betsy Pcabody 710 Second Avenue, Suite 730 (206) 296-6591 Seattle, WA 98104 Adopt a Beach is a community organization that promotes citizen stewardship for marine resources in the state of Washington. More than 500 volunteers have participated in the pro- gram since its inception in 1985. Monitoring projects are diverse and include (1) monitoring beached birds for physical condition and cause of death, (2) inventorying wetlands, (3) con- ducting a quarterly beach cleanup and debris inventory, and (4) collecting shellfish for PSP testing as part of the Puget Sound Ambient Monitoring Program. Data are given to the state and have been used for long-term resource assessment and management, determination of water quality, and shellfish closures for red tide. Adopt a Beach also sponsors Coastweeks and other educational activities, as well as revegetation projects. Publications include various brochures and the "Volunteer Resource Guide," a directory of volunteer opportuni- ties in caring for Washington's outer coast. The program has 2 staff members and an annual budget of approximately $80,000. Most of the funding to date has come from grants from state agencies, but the program hopes to diversify its funding sources in the future. Adopt-A-Stream Foundation Tom Murdoch P.O. Box 5558 (206) 388-3313 Everett, WA 98206 The Adopt-A-Stream Foundation was established to promote environmental education and stream enhancement. Since the program was started in 1981 by the Snohomish County Plan- ning Department, 30 community groups and 40 schools have adopted streams in Snohomish County. Adopting groups enhance their streams by activities like building fish ladders and revegetating stream banks. Even more important, they get involved in the politics of water quality by monitoring development projects and participating in the development of protective legislation for streams and wetlands. Some of the adopting groups do chemical and biological monitoring as well. Since 1982, the program has con- ducted clean-water training workshops for teachers. Funding for the program comes from a combination of government grants and contracts and private individual and corporate do- nations. The program's long-term goal is to have every stream in the Northwest adopted by watershed residents and to have every stream restored to the way it was 100 years ago. The program has produced two publications: "Adopting a Stream, A Northwest Handbook," which costs $11.95 (including handling charge) and can be ordered by calling 1-800-441- 4115; and "Adopting a Wetland, A Northwest Guide," which can be ordered by sending $7 (includes handling charge) to Adopt-A-Strcam at the above address. ------- 36 WASHINGTON Chautauqua Northwest Jane V.L. Hardy 1424 Fourth Avenue, Suite 607 (206)223-1378 Seattle, WA 98101 In the fall of 1989, Chautauqua Northwest was selected by the Puget Sound Water Quality Authority to carry out citizen monitoring activities as part of the Puget Sound Ambient Monitoring Program. Teams of 12 "anti-dirty dozen" senior citizen volunteers will collect shellfish samples for bacterial and toxic analysis, collect fish for toxic analysis, and perform other monitoring and collection activities. The data collected by Chautauqua Northwest will be used by state agencies involved in the Puget Sound Ambient Monitoring Program to determine the human health risk status of shellfish beds and fish. Training and background information for each assignment are provided by the appropriate agency. A $25,000 grant from state funds administered by the Puget Sound Water Quality Authority covers operat- ing expenses for the projects. Friends of the Sammamish River Bill Way Seattle Chapter of the Izaak Walton League (206) 822-5242 1029 Market Street, Suite B Kirkland,WA 98033 The program was begun in spring 1989 to revegetate the banks of the Sammamish River, a dredged river maintained by the Army Corps of Engineers. Vegetation would improve the aesthetic potential of the river, restore wildlife habitat along its banks, and improve water quality for the annual salmon run. Roughly 50 citizens came out to plant trees and shrubs on two scheduled "planting days" in the first season of operation. Permit applications are filed and plants purchased by the program's volunteer organizers. Grants for materials were received through the Izaak Walton League from county agencies. Public opinion and county pressure will be used in an attempt to reverse Army Corps restrictions on side slope vegetation in flood control areas. Quest Northwest Miles Hanchett 1140 Sierra Place (206)775-1550 Edmonds, WA 98020 Quest Northwest, founded in 1972, is a nonprofit environmental school dedicated to pro- viding junior and senior high school youth with opportunities to perform scientific data- gathering activities in the outdoors. Eight to 20 volunteers lead student groups in monitor- ing park trails and water bodies. Groups sample dissolved oxygen, pH (LaMotte kit), temperature, turbidity (Secchi disk), and E. coli (using an innovative solar-powered incubat- ing system developed by the program). Projects are chosen not only for their educational value but also for their value to park management services and other resource planning agencies. Quest Northwest's operating budget is supplemented by state home-school pro- grams and federal sources. The San Juan Preservation Trust Robert Myhr Route #1, Box 2114 (206)468-2258 Lopez, WA 98261 The monitoring program is an integral part of the San Juan Preservation Trust, a conserva- tion project for wildlife habitat, wetlands, and natural landmarks in the San Juan Islands. Annually, 20 to 30 volunteers monitor conservation easements and fee-owned land of the land trust. The data reports become part of the permanent records of the trust. The San Juan Preservation Trust was founded in 1979 and is funded entirely by voluntary contributions from over 600 members from the Islands community. ------- WASHINGTON 37 Stillaguamish River Volunteer Water Quality Kit Paulsen Monitoring Project (206) 653-7477 Tulalip Fisheries Department 3901 Totem Beach Road Marysville, WA 98270 This monitoring program on the lower part of the Stillaguamish River watershed was started by the Tulalip Indian tribes in September 1989. Approximately 35 adult volunteers and 125 students are involved in taking monthly samples at 26 sites. Lab analyses are performed by some of the volunteers and also by trained staff. The following parameters are monitored: turbidity (turbidometer), pH (Altex Chemmate pH meter), temperature and dissolved oxygen (YSI DO meter), salinity and conductivity (YSI salinity and conductivity meter), nitrates/nitrites and orthophosphates (spectrophotometry), fecal coliform bacteria (membrane filtration), and discharge (stream heights compared against a flow-rating curve). The program's goals are to establish baselines and identify problem areas. Final results are given to the state Department of Ecology. Funding for the program comes from a Centen- nial Qean Water grant (state grant from cigarette tax money). Stream Team Program Sarah Hubbard-Gray City of Bellevue (206) 453-4895 Storm and Surface Water Utility P.O. Box 90012 Bellevue, WA 98009-9012 The Stream Team Program, started in 1988, was developed to involve residents and busi- nesses in monitoring, surveying, and enhancing the stream systems in their communities. The program establishes local stream teams that represent a specific geographic area and are coordinated with the help of a volunteer captain. The areas of training and information collection include (1) Water quality watch and sampling. Volunteers monitor aquatic macro- invertebrates (insects and insect larvae) using Serber samplers and artificial substrate sam- plers. Also, volunteers collect stream water samples during storms, and send them to agen- cies to be analyzed for turbidity, conductivity, and total phosphorus. (2) Salmon watch. Volunteers conduct salmon spawning surveys in which they identify the species and number of sajmon returning as well as the time and location of salmon spawning. (3) Flood watch. Volunteers take daily readings of stream levels using staff gauges, and also read crest gauges to document maximum stream level during storms. (4) Habitat evaluation. Volunteers evaluate the habitat characteristics of stream corridors using EPA's new Stream- walk Checklist. (5) Wetlands and wildlife watch. Volunteers survey wetlands to determine the extent of invasion by the noxious weed purple loosestrife. (6) Revegetation and stream improvement techniques. Currently, over 100 volunteers are involved in the Stream Team Program. Funding comes from a state grant, plus local match from the city of Bellevue Storm and Surface Water Utility. The data collected by the volunteers are used by various agencies, including the city of Bellevue, King County Surface Water Management, the municipality of metropolitan Seattle, and EPA. The program produces a quarterly newsletter, "News Splash," and the Stream Team Guidebook (available from the above address for $10). ------- 38 WASHINGTON Washington's Citizen Lake Monitoring Project Julie Rector Department of Ecology (206) 586-5496 7171 Clean Water Lane, Building 8 MS LH-14 Olympia, WA 98504 This is a new program, begun in 1989 with funds from federal Gean Lakes and 205(j) grants. In their first season, 56 volunteers measured surface water temperature and trans- parency {Secchi disk) biweekly on 50 lakes. The monitoring program will be expanded in the 1990 season to cover twice the number of lakes and will include surface pH (Merck pH strips) and samples taken for total nitrogen and total phosphorus (analyzed at state lab). In addition, volunteers complete questionnaires on macrophyte coverage in the lakes and lake and watershed use. Information is used to identify those lakes with water quality problems and rate them in terms of their needs under the state lake restoration program Water Tenders Ellouise Pritchett P.O. Box 402 (206)485-2056 Woodinville,WA 98702 Judith Westall (206) 788-9372 Water Tenders was founded in January 1989 by 9 citizens of the Woodinville/Redmond area and now numbers 45 active members. Volunteers monitor rainfall and flow, perform fish counts and habitat evaluation, and monitor visual parameters such as color, sedimenta- tion, and type of vegetation for all aquatic resources (streams, wetlands, lakes, etc.) in the Bear Creek Planning Area. The group is not yet performing chemical monitoring but plans to begin testing for nutrients and dissolved oxygen on an as-needed basis. The purpose of the monitoring is to document the impact of development on the natural resources. Water Tenders also participates in restorations, revegetations, and cleanups, and provides an educational outreach to the general public. Funding comes from private donations and grants from public agencies. WEST VIRGINIA Cacapon River Committee James L. Matheson Box 11 (304) 856-2869 Yellow Spring, WV 26865 The Cacapon River Committee was founded in 1985 and has 300 members. They monitor the Cacapon River for water clarity (spectrophotometer), oxygen, pH, bacteria, and nutri- ents. Volunteer monitoring is carried out in coordination with the Pine Cabin Run Ecologi- cal Laboratory which processes nutrient and bacteria samples. All field and laboratory tech- niques meet the technical standards established by the EPA and U.S. Geological Survey. Monitoring is being done to establish the baseline health of the river and to mobilize the public to protect the river in its natural state. Potomac Valley Audubon Society James Keel P.O. Box 578 (304)725-4186 Shepherdstown, WV 25443 The Potomac Valley Audubon Society began monitoring streams and rivers in West Vir- ginia's eastern panhandle in the fall of 1989. To date, 21 monitors have been trained. Moni- toring is based on the Izaak Walton League of America's "Save Our Streams" program. Monthly sampling of aquatic life forms on stream bottoms provides an index of changes in biological diversity and changes in water quality. Significant findings are reported to state and federal authorities for follow-up action. ------- WISCONSIN 39 West Virginia Citizens Action Group Norm Steenstra 1324 Virginia Street E (304) 346-5891 Charleston, WV 25301 This stream monitoring program will get under way in May 1990 with a volunteer training session directed by Izaak Walton League staff. Stream monitoring will include temperature, pH (meter), dissolved oxygen, nitrogen, and fluoride. In addition to the chemical parame- ters measured, physical characteristics along the stream banks (such as wells, discharge sites, and areas of severe erosion) are being mapped. Information will be compiled to form a baseline database on water quality in the streams and to identify dischargers and potential sources of nonpoint source pollution. The monitoring program will be run in coordination with the state Department of Natural Resources and the Izaak Walton League Save Our Streams program. West Virginia Mountain Stream Monitors Craig Mains P.O. Box 170 (304) 292-3463 Morgantown, WV 26505 Streams in West Virginia are measured for acid mine drainage parameters such as pH, iron, manganese, aluminum, sulfate, alkalinity (colorimetric method), conductivity (Yellow Springs meter), and benthic invertebrates. Approximately 25 active volunteers monitor 50 different stations. Mountain Stream Monitors is also working to develop a water analytical laboratory to serve low- and moderate-income citizens and groups. The program focuses on baseline studies, education, and watchdogging. Funding comes from private donations, dues, and other fund-raising efforts. WISCONSIN Self-Help Lake Monitoring Program Carolyn Rumery Bctz Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (608) 266-8117 Bureau of Water Resources Management P.O. Box 7921 Madison, WI53707-7921 Over 300 lakes in Wisconsin are currently being monitored by volunteers for Secchi disk depth, water level, water color, water quality perceptions, ice-on and ice-off dates, and weather observations. The state-funded program, which began in 1986, will be expanded in 1990 with a pilot program on 36 lakes. New parameters to be added will include phospho- rus and chlorophyll (standard laboratory methods), rainfall, pH, and temperature and dissolved oxygen profiles (LaMotte kit). Data users include the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, U.S. Geological Survey, and county agencies, as well as researchers using ice-on/ice-off dates to document global warming. The central focus is on baseline studies, long-term trends, and education. Wisconsin "Wetlands Watch" Program Cy Lyle Wisconsin Audubon Council (414) 241-4559 11344 N. Shore Cliff Lane Mequon,WI 53092 The "Wetlands Watch" program began in 1988 and has been expanded to cover almost every county in the state. It is a volunteer program, spearheaded by a statewide coordina- tor, with active local volunteers from 16 Audubon chapters providing on-the-ground review of permit requests under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act. Information on potential impacts are shared with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. The program's goal is to minimize the loss of wetlands in Wisconsin. ------- 40 National Programs Adopt-A-Stream Eileen Malloy-Desormeaux Delta Laboratories, Inc. (716) 426-0773 34 Elton Street Rochester, NY 14607 The Adopt-A-Stream program, started by Delta Laboratories, currently involves students in 95 schools and communities in 21 different states. The students monitor lakes and streams; the parameters measured vary depending on students' age and ability. Younger students usually monitor just temperature, turbidity, and flow, while older students also monitor pH, chloride, nitrate, phosphate, dissolved oxygen, and hardness. LaMotte kits are used for most of the tests. About 10% of the students also monitor biological parameters—fecal coliforms, plankton, and phytoplankton. All analyses are performed by the students, and Delta Laboratories provides free backup testing for any questionable results. Funding for the program comes from private foundation grants. The program's goal is primarily educational. The long-term goal is to collect baseline data on all waterways nationwide. The "Adopt-A-Stream Handbook/' which explains how to set up a monitoring program and describes all the tests involved, including detailed procedural descriptions and explanations of what the results mean, is available for $25. The Christmas Bird Count Susan Drennan National Audubon Society (212) 546-9189 950 Third Avenue New York, NY 10022 The National Audubon Society's Christmas Bird Count is the single most popular voluntary early-winter-bird continental inventory in the world. During the 89th Christmas Bird Count, in 1988-1989, over 42,000 volunteers censused about 1,550 count units in North, Central, and South America and the West Indies. A count unit encompasses a 15-mile-radius circle in which volunteers try to cover the entire area within one 24-hour period. All individual birds encoun- tered are tabulated, and a final report of the Christmas Bird Count is published in a special issue of American Birds, National Audubon's ornithological journal. Citizens' Acid Rain Monitoring Network Dorene Bolze National Audubon Society (212) 546-9297 950 Third Avenue New York, NY 10022 The National Audubon Society sponsors a nationwide acid rain monitoring network to measure the pH in precipitation. Currently, over 300 volunteers record pH measurements. Samples are taken on a "per-rain-event" basis using Merck pH strips. The information is used by the press and television weather forecasters and is also sent to congressional representatives along with encouragement to support more rigorous clean air legislation. The citizen monitors are con- tacted by the staff through periodic newsletters. They are occasionally asked to communicate their results through interviews with local newspapers and television stations. Cooperative Weather Observer Program Thomas Blackburn National Weather Service (301) 427-7724 NOAA Silver Spring, MD 20910 This volunteer program has the longest history of using citizen volunteers to monitor the atmosphere. Celebrating its centennial in 1990, the program now boasts 11,500 volunteers who record rainfall, snowfall, and maximum and minimum temperatures. For their efforts, volun- teers receive awards for length of service and outstanding quality of observations. Their data are checked and logged into the database of the National Climatic Data Center (Asheville, NC). Data are published monthly in "Climatological Data" and are frequently used to verify damage caused by adverse weather, to monitor the nation's climate and climate change, and to justify congressional funding for flood- and weather-observing networks. ------- NATIONAL PROGRAMS 41 Earthwatch Blue Magrudcr 680 Mt. Auburn Street (617) 926-8200 P.O. Box 403 Watertown, MA 02272 Earthwatch is an international nonprofit organization that sponsors field research worldwide by finding paying volunteers to work as short-term (2-3 week) field assistants. Since 1971, 21,900 volunteers have worked on 1,085 projects in 85 countries and 36 states. Typically, university faculty direct the labor-intensive research in areas such as earth, marine, and life sciences. The results of the work are published by the investigators in academic and profes- sional journals as well as in Earthwatch's membership magazine. GREEN Project William B. Stapp School of Natural Resources (313) 764-1410 University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1115 The Global Rivers Environmental Education Network (GREEN) is in its pilot year of initiating an international network for students monitoring rivers and estuaries. GREEN uses a number of approaches—including a computer conference, newsletters, and a sister watersheds pro- gram—to link students around the world. Students will perform chemical and biological monitoring for parameters such as pH, temperature, turbidity, total suspended solids, dis- solved oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, BOD, and fecal coliforms. Students are encouraged to take action to resolve water quality problems they discover. By discussing local issues and strategies with students in other regions, participants will develop a sense of global coopera- tion. The project is funded by grants from private organizations. International Shorebird Survey Brian Harrington Manomet Bird Observatory (508) 224-6521 P.O. Box 936 Manomet, MA 02345 The International Shorebird Survey utilizes about 800 volunteers to monitor shorebird migra- tion and habitats throughout the Americas. Birdwatchers record the presence, absence, and distribution of shorebirds, as well as habitat characteristics. The data collected are used by many local, state, and federal government agencies and by national and local conservation groups. The program began in 1973 and stresses long-term trends and baseline studies. National Marine Debris Data Base Kathy O'Hara Center for Marine Conservation (804) 851-6734 306 A Buckroe Avenue Hampton, VA 23664 The Center for Marine Conservation (CMC) sponsors the National Marine Debris Data Base, a national network of volunteers who participate in beach cleanups and use standard data cards supplied by CMC to record information on types and quantities of marine debris collected. Debris items are categorized by composition (e.g., plastic, glass, wood) and type (e.g., bag, bot- tle, small piece). Certain items (called indicator items) can be used to determine the source of the debris. The data are analyzed by CMC and compiled into an annual report summarizing cleanup results from all over the country. The report is used by various groups, including state legislators, educators, and civic organizations. Currently the data are being used to support pending legislation on issues such as balloon-releasing events and polystyrene packaging. ------- 42 NATIONAL PROGRAMS NOAA's Marine Debris Information Office Pam Lichtman Atlantic Coast and Gulf of Mexico (202) 429-5609 c/o Center for Marine Conservation 1725 DeSales Street, NW Washington, DC 20036 NOAA's Marine Debris Information Office Katie Patterson Pacific Coast (415)391-6204 c/o Center for Marine Conservation 312 Sutler Street, Suite 606 San Francisco, CA 94108 NOAA's National Marine Debris Information Office, operated by the Center for Marine Con- servation, distributes information on marine debris and entanglement to marine user groups and other groups interested in the marine debris problem and solutions. Publications include Citizen's Guide to Plastics in the Ocean (book), the annual National Beach Cleanup Report, and numerous brochures and educational materials. Contact the Washington office to order publi- cations. River Watch Network Jack Byrne 153 State Street (802) 223-3840 Montpelier, VT 05602 River Watch Network (RWN) is a national, nonprofit program that assists local groups in starting river monitoring and protection programs. RWN grew from a very successful pro- gram to clean up the Ottauquechee River in central Vermont in 1970. The program provides local monitoring groups with effective methods and techniques for improving the quality of their water. They focus on transforming polluted waterways into rivers fit for recreational use. Currently, RWN is working with local groups on 20 rivers in 12 states. RWN provides ongo- ing, long-term help to the groups it assists. Save Our Streams Karen Firehock Izaak Walton League of America (703) 528-1818 1401 Wilson Boulevard, Level B Arlington, VA 22209 The Izaak Walton League's Save Our Streams (SOS) program has initiated thousands of SOS projects across the country beginning in the early 1970s. Projects are run through League chapters and in partnership with state agencies and other conservation organizations. The League's national office also oversees two statewide biological monitoring networks in Vir- ginia and West Virginia. A SOS kit, available for $5.00, explains monitoring techniques, river ecology, and problem recognition and solutions. Other materials, such as teaching guides and restoration project booklets, are also available. Contact the national office for a listing of SOS programs in any state or for information on starting a project. The quarterly SOS newsletter, "Splash," is available free. * U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1990—720-516/D06592 ------- Do you want to be in the next edition? 43 Help make the next edition of the directory more comprehensive! If you are involved in a citizen volunteer environmental monitoring program that is not listed in this directory, or if you know of such a program, please fill out the information below and mail it to Virginia Lee, Coastal Resources Center, Graduate School of Oceanography, The University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI02882-1197. We will contact all new programs that we hear about for the next edition. Name of program Contact person Address ___^_ Phone DESCRIPTION (Note: Please include information such as: program goals; number of volunteers; year program was initiated; methods used; staffing; approximate costs to run program; funding sources; use of results by government agencies; use of results for legislation, regulatory compliance, watch- dogging, etc.; education and restoration projects; titles of reports, videos, and manuals.) ------- |