I   NONPOINT SOIRCf  SICCESS STOIY


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 Implementing Conservation Practices Reduced Polluted Runoff,
 Restoring the Biological Integrity of Caney Creek
Watprhnrlv Imnrnx/prl  Sedimentation and organic enrichment from silvicultural
                             and agricultural activities impacted water quality in
 Mississippi's Caney Creek. As  a result, the Mississippi Department of Environmental
 Quality (MDEQ) placed Caney Creek on the state's 2002 Clean Water Act (CWA)
 section 303(d) list of impaired waters for aquatic life use impairment. Implementing
 best management practices (BMPs) as part of the Pickwick Reservoir Tributaries
 Restoration and Protection Project significantly reduced sediment and nutrients
 entering  Caney Creek. As a result, a 4.99-mile segment of Caney Creek was assessed
 as attaining the aquatic life use in the state's 2014 CWA section 305(b) report.
 Problem
 Caney Creek is in the Coke Creek-Caney Creek
 Watershed (HUC 060300051104) in northern
 Mississippi's Tishomingo County. The watershed
 spans approximately 22,202 acres, and is comprised
 primarily of agricultural land, timberland and pas-
 tureland (Figure 1). Pollution sources in Caney Creek
 included sedimentation from silviculture and agricul-
 tural practices, organic enrichment from agricultural
 processes, and habitat alterations.

 Biological community data are routinely used by
 MDEQ to determine if streams are healthy enough to
 support a balanced aquatic community. Caney Creek
 (Waterbody ID: MS700312) was monitored in 2001
 as part of Mississippi's  biological monitoring pro-
 gram. Using MDEQ's index of biological integrity, the
 Mississippi Benthic Index of Stream Quality (M-BISQ),
 Caney Creek scored 48.14, less than the assessment
 threshold of 57.71 required to attain aquatic life use
 support for this region. Therefore, Caney Creek was
 placed on the 2002 CWA section 303(d) list for aquatic
 life use impairment; it was subsequently selected as a
 priority watershed for restoration activities by MDEQ.
        Coke Creek-Caney Creek Subwatershed
        060300051104
 Project Highlights
 In 2007 MDEQ partnered with the Mississippi Soil
 and Water Conservation Commission, the U.S.
 Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources
 Conservation Service (NRCS) and the Tishomingo
 County Soil and Water Conservation District to
Figure 1. The 22,202-acre Coke Creek-Caney Creek
subwatershed is in northern Mississippi.
implement the Pickwick Reservoir Tributaries
Restoration and Protection Project. BMP installa-
tions within the Coke Creek-Caney Creek watershed
as part of this project began in 2009 and were com-

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Figure 2. Grade stabilization structures in Caney
Creek were used to prevent erosion and enhance the
environmental quality of the creek.

pleted by the end of that year. The BMPs supported
with CWA section 319 funds included over 40 acres
of nutrient management, eight grade stabilization
structures (Figure 2), one pond and one critical
planting area (Figure 3) within the Caney Creek
subwatershed. In addition, conservation practice
systems were installed by NRCS in coordination
with the watershed project ongoing in the Coke
Creek-Caney Creek watershed, including four grade
stabilization structures, 128 acres of prescribed
grazing, 99 acres of nutrient management, 55 acres
of tree/shrub establishment and one animal water-
ing facility.
   Results
   In 2011 MDEQ returned to the original sampling
   location in Caney Creek to collect biological commu-
   nity data. The score was 87.92, above the threshold
   for attainment in this region. Using this  2011 data, a
   4.99-mile segment of Caney Creek was assessed as
   attaining the aquatic life use in the 2014 CWA section
   305(b) report.
                                                       Figure 3. Critical area planting along Caney Creek
                                                       was necessary to establish permanent vegetation on
                                                       sites that had high erosion rates.
                                                       Partners and Funding
                                            The restoration of Caney Creek was a collective effort
                                            between the Mississippi Soil and Water Conservation
                                            Commission, MDEQ, U.S. Environmental Protection
                                            Agency, NRCS and the Tishomingo County Soil and
                                            Water Conservation District. The total cost of the
                                            overall  Pickwick Reservoir Tributaries Restoration
                                            and Protection Project was $1,219,228, of which
                                            $720,900 was comprised of CWA section 319 funds.
                                            Section 319 funds were  expended in the following
                                            way: $139,006 for technical assistance, $42,417 for
                                            education and information outreach, and $540,477
                                            for BMP installation. Participating state and local
                                            stakeholders contributed a total of $498,328 towards
                                            the implementation of the watershed project.
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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Water
Washington, DC

EPA841-F-15-001YY
November 2015
                                                    For additional information contact:
                                                    Ann Porter
                                                    Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality
                                                    Ann_Porter@deq.state.ms. us
                                                    601-961-5394

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