%
                NONPIINT SOURCE SUCCESS STURY
 Implementing a Suite of Best Management Practices Results in
 Removal of Bayou Mallet s Dissolved  Oxygen Impairment
Waterbody Improved
                               Pollution from agricultural runoff entering Louisiana's Bayou
                               Mallet caused dissolved oxygen levels to fall below water quality
standards, which impaired the bayou's fish and wildlife propagation (FWP) designated use. As a result,
Bayou Mallet was listed on the 2002 modified court-ordered Clean Water Act (CWA) section 303(d)
list of impaired waters. Since 2005, local landowners have implemented agricultural best management
practices (BMPs) within the watershed to reduce runoff of sediment and fertilizer. Dissolved oxygen
levels have improved, prompting the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) to
remove the dissolved oxygen impairment from the CWA section 303(d) list in 2010. Dissolved oxygen
levels continue to trend upward.
 Problem
 The Bayou Mallet watershed (LDEQsubsegment
 050103) is in Acadia, Evangeline, and St. Landry par-
 ishes in Louisiana; it covers approximately 141 square
 miles (Figure 1). Primary agricultural land uses in
 the watershed are soybeans (22 percent), pasture
 (19 percent) and rice (17 percent). Producers typically
 add fertilizer to fields in this watershed to enhance
 crop production. Nutrients in the fertilizer are primar-
 ily nitrogen and phosphorus.

 Louisiana's water quality criteria for dissolved oxygen
 in Bayou Mallet are seasonal. From March through
 November (summer), dissolved oxygen must remain
 above 3.0 milligrams per liter (mg/L); from December
 through February (winter), dissolved oxygen  levels must
 remain above 5.0 mg/L. To meet the FWP designated
 use, no more than 10 percent of measurements taken
 over a 12-month period may fall below the seasonal
 criteria. In 1998, three of 12 ambient dissolved oxygen
 samples (25 percent) failed to meet seasonal criteria:
 2.2, 2.95 and 1.73 mg/L. In 2003, two of 11 ambient
 dissolved oxygen samples (18 percent) did not meet
 criteria: 2.94 and 2.95 mg/L. Sampling in both years
 showed that the bayou failed to meet the 10 percent
 exceedance threshold for dissolved oxygen.

 The suspected source of impairment was runoff
 from crop production that transported sediment and
                                                        Bayou Mallet
                                                     Subsegment050103
                                                         Land Use
                                                0 075 1.5  3   4.5  6Miles
                                              Figure 1. The Bayou Mallet watershed is in central Louisiana.
                                              nutrients to the watershed, threatening fish and wildlife.
                                              High nutrient loading facilitates algal growth and oxygen
                                              depletion as the algae die off and decompose, resulting
                                              in low levels of dissolved oxygen. Due to these condi-
                                              tions, Bayou Mallet was listed for dissolved oxygen
                                              impairment on the modified court-ordered CWA section
                                              303(d) list of impaired waters in  2002.

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   •=    Dissolved Oxygen Criteria Exceedance Rates (1998-2013)
            1998
                      2003
                                2005
                            Year(s)
                                        2008-2009
                                                 2012-2013
   Figure 2. Annual exceedance rates of dissolved oxygen criteria
   in Bayou Mallet (ambient sampling cycles, 1998-2013).
          Project Highlights
          A total maximum daily load was developed in 2002,
          which indicated that nonpoint source pollution loads
          should be reduced by 12.5 percent from March
          through November to meet the dissolved oxygen crite-
          ria; no load reductions were necessary from December
          through February. Beginning in 2005, the Louisiana
          Department of Agriculture and Forestry (LDAF) and the
          U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources
          Conservation Service (NRCS) worked with local
          landowners to implement several agricultural BMPs,
          including nutrient management (1,911 acres), irrigation
          land leveling (14,271 acres), conservation crop rotation
          (5,285 acres), grade stabilization structures (222 units),
          wetland wildlife management (15,672 acres), and field
          borders (142,050 feet). From 2010 to 2013 additional
          BMPs were implemented with 319 funds in the water-
          shed which included conservation crop rotation, resi-
          due and tillage management (no-till/direct seeding),
          grade stabilization structure, irrigation land leveling,
          irrigation water management, nutrient management
          and pest management.
          Results
           Dissolved oxygen concentrations improved in Bayou
           Mallet as a result of the BMP implementation. In the
           2008-2009 monitoring period, one sample was below
           3 mg/L in the summer season. In the 2012-2013
           monitoring period, one sample was below 5 mg/L in
           the winter season. These results translate to a less
                                              Figure 3. Bayou Mallet below Louisiana Highway 95 in 2015,
                                              after restoration efforts improved dissolved oxygen levels and
                                              restored the FWP designated use.

                                              than 10 percent annual exceedance rate of the sea-
                                              sonal  dissolved oxygen criteria  in the 2008-2009 and
                                              2012-2013 sampling seasons (Figure 2), both of which
                                              meet water quality criteria. Due to these improve-
                                              ments, LDEQ removed Bayou Mallet from the state
                                              impaired waters list for dissolved oxygen impairment
                                              in 2010 (Figure 3).
                                             Partners and Funding
                                              LDAF provided $152,352 in CWA section 319 funding,
                                              along with landowner in-kind match of $146,782 for
                                              a total of $299,134 from FY2010-2013. NRCS also
                                              provided approximately $3,909,310 in federal funding
                                              along with landowner in-kind match of $3,658,475
                                              from FY2005-2012.
yss
Ill
o
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Water
Washington, DC


EPA841-F-16-001G
May 2016
For additional information contact:
Faran Dietz, Office of Soil and Water Conservation, Louisiana
  Department of Agriculture and Forestry
fdietz@ldaf.state.la.us • 337-893-5664 Ext. 3
Karen Vidrine, Nonpoint Source Pollution Unit, Louisiana
  Department of Environmental Quality
Karen.Vidrine@la.gov • 225-219-1208

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