Section 319

               NONPOINT SOURCE  PROGRAM SUCCESS STORY


                                            WlVfa
 Restoring Stream Channel and Riparian Areas Improves Pierceville Run
Waterbodv Improved    Sediment in  runoff from agricultural lands impaired
                    r     J      Pennsylvania's Pierceville Run and its tributaries, prompting
 the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) to add 9.71 miles of
 watershed streams to the state's Clean Water Act (CWA) section 303(d) list of impaired
 waters in 2002.  In lower Pierceville Run, project partners stabilized a degraded portion of
 stream channel and restored riparian forest  buffers while restricting livestock from the stream
 and riparian areas. Water quality improved in the restored section, allowing PADEP to remove
 a 1.65-mile-long segment of the Pierceville Run from the list of impaired waters in 2012.
 Problem
 Pierceville Run (Figure 1) is a headwater tributary
 within the 72-square-mile South Branch Codorus
 Creek watershed (South Branch) in York County.
 Originating just north of the Maryland-Pennsylvania
 border, Pierceville Run is designated for cold-water
 fishery support.

 Agriculture is the primary land use in the water-
 shed. Nonpoint source runoff from cropland and
 pastureland delivered high nutrient and sediment
 loads to Pierceville Run and the South  Branch.
 Along the lower mainstem of Pierceville Run, the
 streambanks were damaged by livestock. They had
 been eroding at a rate of 1.5 feet per year, forming
 three-to four-foot-high, unstable vertical banks.

 A stream survey conducted by the Izaak Walton
 League of America (IWLA) in 1999 indicated that
 the Pierceville Run watershed was a degraded
 aquatic ecosystem. PADEP performed a bioassess-
 ment at two stations on the stream that same year
 and confirmed that the stream was impaired by
 siltation and flow alterations. As a result, PADEP
 included all 9.71 stream miles of the Pierceville Run
 watershed on the state's CWA section 303(d) list of
 impaired waters in 2002 for not meeting the aquatic
 life designated use because of siltation from
 agricultural sources. The impaired waters included
 5.81 miles of the mainstem of Pierceville Run as
 well as 3.9 miles of tributaries.

 PADEP developed a total maximum daily load
 (TMDL) in 2003 to serve as a  "pollution diet"
 for the entire South Branch watershed, includ-
 ing Pierceville Run. The TMDL set limits for
Figure 1. Watershed partners restored this section of
Pennsylvania's Pierceville Run by grading streambanks,
planting a riparian forest buffer and installing fences to
prevent cattle access.
the sediment and nutrient (total phosphorus)
loads, which serve as goals for remediation. The
9.71 impaired stream miles of Pierceville Run
required an 87 percent reduction in nutrients
(2,857.61 pounds per year); and a 42 percent reduc-
tion in sediment (1,539,972.47  pounds per year) to
meet the TMDL water quality goals.

In 2007 PADEP developed a Codorus Creek
watershed implementation plan (WIP), which listed
Pierceville Run as impaired because of streambank
erosion. Recommended practices included stabiliz-
ing the streambanks, preventing livestock stream
access and establishing riparian buffers.

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             Project Highlights
            The IWLA, PADEP and the York County
            Conservation District partnered to address the
            water quality problems identified in the TMDL and
            the WIP. First, the partners designed and imple-
            mented a natural stream channel restoration plan in
            2006 for Pierceville Run. They restored 2,272 linear
            feet of the stream channel along the WIP-identified
            targeted segment (see Figure 1). The project aimed
            to reduce sediment and nutrients while improving
            flow regimes and aquatic habitat. The partners
            installed in-stream rock structures and graded and
            stabilized streambanks to stop active erosion and to
            reconnect the stream to its floodplain.

            Next, the partners planted an extensive ripar-
            ian forest buffer along the project segment; it
            included grasses, forbs and 600 trees. To protect
            the restored streambanks and riparian forest buffer
            areas, the partners installed livestock exclusion
            fences. These restoration efforts were designed to
            remediate the WIP-targeted segment of Pierceville
            Run, as well as to improve water quality in down-
            stream segments in the greater South Branch
            watershed by removing pollution sources.
             Results
            The restoration efforts helped to reduce sediment
            loads to Pierceville Run by an estimated 39 percent
            (1,400,000 pounds per year), nearly meeting the
            42 percent sediment reduction goal called for in the
            TMDL. Restoration efforts have also led to progress
            in meeting the 87 percent total phosphorus load-
            ing reduction goal in the TMDL. As of 2011, total
            phosphorus  loading was  reduced by 39 percent
            (1,271 pounds per year).

            In spring 2006, PADEP's Watershed Support Section
            began monitoring the project area for pebble counts,
            macroinvertebrates, habitat and water chemistry.
            Pebble count data for 2006 and 2009 showed that
            sediment size increased over time to include a great-
            er percentage of larger gravel and cobbles, indicating
            habitat improvement (Figure 2). Before the restora-
            tion project in May 2006, the mid-station substrates
            were composed of 34 percent sand-silt, 62 percent
            gravel and 4  percent cobbles. By September 2009,
            the percentages had improved to 4 percent sand-silt,
            81 percent gravel and 15 percent cobbles.

            PADEP performed an aquatic habitat assessment in
            the restored  section of Pierceville Run in 2011. The
                                                Pebble Counts for Mid-station Pierceville Run,
                                                                 2006 and 2009
                                                       Lliiiml
                                                  0.062            2.0          16.0       64.0       180.0
                                                      sand	* fine gravel	* coarse gravel	> cobble
                                                                Particle Size (millimeters)
                                             Figure 2. Pre- and post-project pebble counts for Pierceville Run
                                             show a trend toward coarser gravel and cobbles, an indication of
                                             improving conditions.

                                             data showed an Index of Biotic Integrity (IBI) value of
                                             71.3, exceeding the minimum IBI score of 63, which
                                             indicates a healthy and unimpaired aquatic ecosys-
                                             tem. On the basis of these data, PADEP removed a
                                             1.65-mile-long segment of the lower mainstem of
                                             Pierceville Run  (from Schuman Road to the conflu-
                                             ence of Pierceville Run and Centerville Run) from the
                                             list of impaired  waters. Project partners attribute the
                                             delisting of this segment to the stream restoration
                                             and riparian forest buffer establishment and associ-
                                             ated protection efforts. Waterbodies upstream of
                                             the project site (4.16 miles of the mainstem and
                                             3.9 miles of tributaries) remain listed as  impaired.
                                             Partners and Funding
                                             IWLA used a $142,922 CWA section 319 grant
                                             in 1999 to assess the South Branch watershed.
                                             The IWLA then secured a $534,120 CWA section
                                             319 grant in 2003 to begin restoring the South
                                             Branch watershed; $356,888 of these funds
                                             were used for the Pierceville Run restoration
                                             project. Approximately $25,000 of the riparian
                                             forest buffer work was funded by PADEP and
                                             the U.S. Department of Agriculture under the
                                             Conservation Reserve Enhancement  Program; the
                                             York County Conservation District managed the
                                             work.  Matching funds included $2,000 from IWLA
                                             and $52,000 from the Aquatic Resource Restoration
                                             Company. The  Pennsylvania Department of
                                             Transportation  provided $100,000 in matching funds
                                             to assist in work near roadways in the watershed.
I
              UJ
              a
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Water
Washington, DC

EPA841-F-12-001N
June 2012
For additional information contact:
Scott N. Heidel
Water Program Specialist
Pennsylvania Department
  of Environmental Protection
717-772-5647 • scheidel@state.pa.us

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