Section 319
                NONPOINT SOURCE  PROGRAM SUCCESS  STORY
 Best Management Practices  Control Urban Nonpoint Source Pollution
                                                                  Peninsula was included
\A/at<2>  hr>iH   I    n  r>>  oH   Whetstone Brook in Michigan's Upper
vvaierooay i mprovea   on the 303(d) |jst jn 1998 and 2QQQ for periodic fjsh ki||s
 Nonpoint source pollution control projects in the watershed have led to increased habitat, res-
 toration of the macroinvertebrate communities within the brook, and elimination of fish kills. In
 2002 Michigan removed Whetstone Brook from its list of impaired waters.
 Problem
 Whetstone Brook flows through Marquette
 County into Marquette Harbor on Lake Superior,
 in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Poor water qual-
 ity caused fish kills in the early 1990s, which led
 Michigan Department of Environmental Quality
 (MIDEQ) to add a 1.7-mile segment of Whetstone
 Brook to its 303(d) list in 1998. MIDEQ attributed
 the problems to sediment, litter, oil, and flash flood-
 prone hydrologic conditions caused by uncontrolled
 storm water runoff from parking lots, roads, and
 inadequately protected upland construction sites.
 Project Highlights
 In the mid-1990s, the Marquette Conservation
 District (District) undertook a project that examined
 the Whetstone Brook watershed, established a
 watershed plan,  and demonstrated best manage-
 ment practices (BMPs) for nonpoint source pollution
 management at two sites. The District installed
 600 linear feet of streambank stabilization, 500 feet
 of a diversion outlet, 5,000 square feet of critical
 area stabilization, 6 acres of filter strip restoration,
 and a storm water detention basin. The District also
 conducted education efforts to highlight the brook
 and to reduce polluted runoff.
 Results
 The BMPs eliminated the cause(s) of the fish
 kills; the last fish kill occurred in 1994. Biological
 monitoring conducted in 1991 (pre-implementa-
 tion)and again in 2001 (post-implementation)
 confirmed that the project was effective. MIDEQ
                                            Table 1. Biological data collected downstream of
                                            the Whetstone Brook project area before and after
                                            installation of BMPs
Year
1991
2001
Macroinvertebrate
taxa
10
16
EPT
taxa*
2
4
Score
-4
-2
Score Range
-9 to +9
Acceptable
Acceptable
                                             EPT= mayflies, caddisflies, and stoneflies—three orders
                                             of pollution-sensitive aquatic insects that are common in
                                             the benthic macroinvertebrate community.

                                            uses a macroinvertebrate community scoring
                                            procedure to assess water quality. Possible
                                            scores range from -9 to +9; a score of less than
                                            -4 is considered unacceptable. The total num-
                                            ber of macroinvertebrate taxa and the number
                                            of pollution-sensitive macroinvertebrate taxa
                                            (mayflies, caddisflies and stoneflies) increased
                                            after BMP implementation (Table 1). The MIDEQ
                                            macroinvertebrate score in Whetstone Brook
                                            improved slightly, from -4 in 1991 to -2 in 2001.
                                            MIDEQ removed Whetstone Brook from the
                                            303(d)listin 2002.


                                            Partners and Funding
                                            MIDEQ provided the Marquette Conservation
                                            District with $101,861  in section  319 funds in
                                            1993 and $197,910 in section 319 funds in 1994.
                                            The District used these funds for both the pre-
                                            implementation planning and implementation of
                                            BMPs in this watershed.
   .  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
   )  Office of Water
i!Sff  Washington, DC
     EPA841-F-07-001CC
     November 2007
                                                 For additional information contact:
                                                 Joe Rathbun, MIDEQ Water Bureau
                                                 517-373-8868
                                                 rathbunj@michigan.gov

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