Section 319
              NDNPDINT SOURCE PROGRAM SUGKSS STPRY
 Agricultural Environmental Management Projects Reduce Phosphorus in Lake

Waterbodv Imoroved  Algal blooms and rooted vegetation impaired recreational
                              uses of New York's Oneida Lake, causing New York to add
 the lake to its Clean Water Act section 303(d) list in 1998. Excess nutrients, specifically
 phosphorus, from agricultural and urban/suburban runoff contributed to the growth of algal
 blooms in the lake. Implementing  best management practices (BMPs) such as barnyard run-
 off management systems, silage leachate control systems, manure storage systems,  and
 nutrient and sediment control systems successfully reduced phosphorus loads to Oneida
 Lake. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation's (DEC) has proposed
 Oneida Lake for delisting in 2008 because data show steady declines  in nutrient enrich-
 ment (phosphorus levels) and indicate that the lake supports designated uses related  to
 nutrient enrichment.
 Problem
 Oneida Lake, while not recognized as one of the
 Finger Lakes, is sometimes referred to as the
 "Thumb of the Finger Lakes." It is the largest lake
 entirely within New York State. It encompasses
 51,000 acres and drains more than 2,300 miles
 of streams. The Oneida Lake watershed is in the
 Oswego-Seneca-Oneida Rivers Drainage Basin,
 which drains to Lake Ontario (Figure 1). It also
 serves as one of the links in the Erie Canal. The
 Oneida Lake watershed (approximately 1,364
 square miles) contains portions of six counties, 69
 municipalities and has a population of 262,000. The
 lake is approximately 21 miles long, 5 miles wide
 and 22 feet deep.

 DEC regional fisheries staff indicated that while
 historically Oneida Lake has been green with con-
 siderable rooted aquatics and algae, anthropogenic
 activities worsened the conditions in some areas.
 DEC identified excess phosphorus as the cause of
 the unusually high number of algal blooms, which
 impaired public bathing and other recreational uses
 and also led to reduced dissolved oxygen levels
 resulting in impacts to aquatic life. DEC placed
 Oneida Lake on the state's 1998 303(d) list of
 impaired waters for violating the state's narrative
 standard for phosphorus, which states that phos-
 phorus may not be present in "amounts that will
 result in growths of algae, weeds and slimes that
 will impair the waters for their best usages."
 Source: New York State
 Lands Interactive Mapping Tool—
 www.dec.ny.gov/outdoor/45415.html
Figure 1. Oneida Lake is located northeast of New York's
Finger Lakes and southeast of Lake Ontario.
Two major reports by the Central New York Regional
Planning and Development Board documented
the status of Oneida Lake and relevant manage-
ment strategies—Oneida Lake: State of the Lake
and Watershed Report (2003) and A Management
Strategy for Oneida Lake and its Watershed (2004).

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      Project Highlights
      Funds from the New York State Agricultural
      Nonpoint Source Abatement and Control Program
      (ANSCAP), a grant program that serves as a vital
      component of the  state's Agricultural Environmental
      Management program, were used to implement
      a series of agricultural BMPs designed to reduce
      nutrient and sediment loads to the Oneida  Lake
      watershed. These  include soil conservation practic-
      es (reduced tillage, buffer strips, fencing, and such),
      silage leachate control systems  (5), manure storage
      systems (3), barnyard runoff management and other
      nutrient and sediment control systems (3),  access
      road improvements (2), constructed wetland (1),
      protected outlet (1), and detention basins (2).

      The Oneida Lake Watershed Agricultural Advisory
      Committee, established in 2002, encourages farm-
      ers' participation in the Oneida Lake Watershed
      Management Program. Supporting this effort,
      ANSCAP has funded a continuing series of BMP
      projects to reduce nutrient, sediment and pathogen
      loads to the watershed.
      Results
      DEC has proposed Oneida Lake for removal from
      the 2008 303(d) list because data show a steady
      decline in phosphorus levels over the past 20 years.
      Oneida Lake now meets the state's narrative stan-
      dard for nutrients and supports its designated uses
      related to nutrient enrichment. The Management
      Strategy for Oneida Lake and its Watershed
      (2004) with the associated State of the Lake and
      its Watershed Report, indicate that current phos-
      phorus levels (20-30 milligrams per liter [mg/L])
      are more than 50 percent less than they were in
      the 1970s (40-60 mg/L). The lower phosphorus
      levels in the lake have reduced the number of algal
                                             blooms and the amount of rooted aquatic vegeta-
                                             tion, consequently improving aquatic life habitat
                                             and restoring the recreational uses of the lake.

                                             Although a range of point and nonpoint source
                                             controls were implemented,  agricultural land man-
                                             agement improvements are considered to be the
                                             primary reason for achieving the load reductions.
                                             Partners and Funding
                                             State agency partnerships among the Departments
                                             of Agriculture and Markets and Environmental
                                             Conservation and the New York Soil and Water
                                             Conservation Committee supported the goals and
                                             objectives of the Oneida Lake Watershed Task
                                             Force with ANSCAP grant funding to implement
                                             high-priority agricultural practices. ANSCAP provid-
                                             ed funding through a series of rounds of requests
                                             for proposals. Many of the BMP projects highlight-
                                             ed in this success story are those from ANSCAP
                                             Round 9 (2002), which provided $249,150 in cost
                                             share funds through the Environmental Protection
                                             Fund (EPF) to the Madison County Soil and Water
                                             Conservation District for work on nine high-prior-
                                             ity dairy farms in the Oneida Lake watershed.
                                             Landowners and sponsors contributed an additional
                                             $147,724. ANSCAP and EPF funds are often used to
                                             match section 319-funded grant projects.

                                             ANSCAP has provided a total of $2,404,922 in all
                                             rounds of funding for other agricultural practices in
                                             the Oneida Lake watershed to reduce the nutrient
                                             and sediment loads to Oneida Lake and its tributar-
                                             ies. With local landowner matches, the total funding
                                             for all agricultural BMP projects in the Oneida  Lake
                                             watershed is $3,382,712. ANSCAP continues to
                                             support BMP projects that contribute to phospho-
                                             rus load reductions in the Oneida Lake watershed.
I
55
PR
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Water
Washington, DC

EPA841-F-08-0010
September 2008
                                                         For additional information contact:
                                                         Seth Ausubel
                                                         Chief, New York Watershed Management Section
                                                         212-637-3852
                                                         Ausubel.Seth@epa.gov

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