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'&?) N8NP0IHT SOURCE SUCCESS STORY

Agricultural Best Management Practices and Erosion Controls
Improve Sebasticook Lake

Waterbody Improved Beg|nnin§ in the 1950s, point source arid nonpoint source (NPS)

pollution in the Sebasticook Lake watershed contributed to excess
nutrients, which resulted in algae blooms, oxygen depletion and decreased water clarity. Water
quality improved after most of the municipal and industrial point sources were removed in the
1980s; however, the lake still experienced prolonged annual algae blooms driven by phosphorus
sources (i.e., internal phosphorus loading from lake sediments, agriculture and developed areas).
From 1981 to 2014, state, federal and local partners provided funding, including Clean Water Act
(CWA) section 319 grants, to install best management practices (BMPs) throughout the watershed.
Late summer drawdowns of the lake also flushed phosphorus downstream. Water quality
monitoring shows significant improvements in the lake's water clarity, phosphorus levels, extent and
duration of aigae blooms, and phosphorus loading from lake sediments.

Problem

Sebasticook Lake, a 4,288-acre waterbody in south-
central Maine, once supported a valuable fishery
and was stocked with trout, landlocked salmon and
rainbow smelt (Figure 1). The lake has historic and
cultural significance as well—a complex of pre-historic
fish weirs lay at the mouth of the Sebasticook River,
on the north shore of the lake. This complex is one
of the oldest known in North America. In the 1950s,
the lake's water quality and coldwater fishery deterio-
rated precipitously because of point source and NPS
pollution in the watershed. The severe water quality
problems were largely attributed to municipal waste-
water discharges from Newport, Dexter and Corinna,
as well as three industrial discharges (including Corrina
Woolen Mill, which was later designated as a U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency [EPA] Superfund
site). Most of these point sources were removed in
the 1980s, and the last point source was eliminated in
2005. Water quality improved gradually, but water-
shed and internal phosphorus sources continued to
fuel annual algal blooms The 2001 Sebasticook Lake
Total Maximum Daily Load report identified the most
important remaining watershed phosphorus sources
as agriculture (45%), roads (19%), residential (15%) and
other development (8%). Internal phosphorus loading
from lake sediments was also a significant source of
phosphorus to the lake.



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Source: MDEP: https://www.maine.gov/dep/water/lakes/bloomriskmap.html

Figure 1. Sebasticook Lake is in south-central Maine.

Story Highlights

In 1982, seasonal drawdowns on Sebasticook Lake
were initiated to release phosphorus-rich water in
the fall (Figure 2). In 1988, the dam outlet was recon-
structed to increase the annual lake drawdown and
export of phosphorus released from lake sediments.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Natural
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) spearheaded
over three decades of work to reduce the phosphorus
export from farming activities in the watershed. From
1981 to 1992, NRCS (formerly the Soil Conservation


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Figure 2. Seasonal lake drawdown (1982) flushed out
excess phosphorus.

Figure- 3. Minimum Secchi disk readings (1972-2018)
show improving clarity over time.

Improving Water Clarity - Secchi Disk Transparency
Sebasticook Lake, Maine

Service) provided funding through the Watershed
Protection and Flood Prevention Act (PL-566) to
install 22 manure storage systems and treat 5,500
acres with conservation tillage, cover crops and other
practices. In 1997 and 2001, NRCS carried out targeted
Environmental Quality Incentives Program work in the
watershed and funded animal waste, nutrient manage-
ment and cropland erosion projects. From 2004 to
2014, NRCS applied 1,471 practices on dairy farms and
cropland including seven waste storage facilities and
18,000 acres of cropland and nutrient management
BMPs. From 2012 to 2014, the National Water Quality
initiative (NWQI) implemented cover crop, crop rota-
tion and forage/biomass plantings on 1,500 acres on
farms in the Alder Brook subwatershed.

From 2002 to 2007, Penobscot County Soil and Water
Conservation District (SWCD) carried out three CWA
section 319 grant projects to tackle nutrient and ero-
sion problems on farms, town and private roads, and
shorefront properties. The projects installed BMPs
including vegetated buffers/filter strips and sediment
basins to control runoff from livestock areas on 49
NPS sites; these reduced annual pollutant loading to
the lake by an estimated 189 tons of sediment and
186 pounds of phosphorus. Project partners also
raised local awareness through workshops, landowner
technical assistance visits, and education about the
importance of shoreline vegetated buffers.

Results

Sebasticook Lake's water quality significantly improved
in terms of water clarity, total phosphorus (TP), and
chlorophyll a. From the time water quality monitor-
ing began in the early 1970s, Sebasticook Lake did
not experience a year without nuisance algal blooms
(defined as a Secchi disk reading < 2 meters) until 1997

and has since had 6 years with minimum clarity at or
over 2 meters (Figure 3). Average epiiimnetic phospho-
rus in the 1980s was 78 parts per billion (ppb), while
from 2009 to 2018 the average was 25 ppb. Recent
chlorophyll a measurements show an average value of
14 ppb (2009-2018) versus an average of 34 ppb in the
1980s. The pool of sediment phosphorus available for
internal recycling, the major driving force for summer
blooms in the lake, declined by an order of magnitude,
from approximately 900 ppb to approximately 90 ppb,
as a result of the annua! lake drawdown. The lake still
has occasional algal blooms in the summer; however,
the blooms start later in the summer, have a shorter
duration and are much less intense.

Partners and Funding

Many federal, state and local partners collaborated
in the effort to improve the lake's water quality.
Partners included NRCS, EPA,. Maine Department
of Environmental Protection, Sebasticook Lake
Improvement Association, Penobscot County SWCD,
USDA Farm Service Agency, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Heart of Maine Resource Conservation
and Development, University of Maine Cooperative
Extension, Sebasticook Lake Association, nine municipali-
ties, Penobscot Valley Council of Governments, Maine
Department of Marine Resources, and many landowners.

From 1975 to 1985, NRCS provided $500,000 in NWQI
funding and $1.4 million from PL-566. EPA's Clean Lakes
program and local contributions funded the $0.43
million dam outlet reconstruction project. EPA also
provided $157,310 in CWA section 319 funds for three
watershed implementation projects. Towns, the Maine
Department of Agriculture, landowners, and other
partners contributed $112,711 in match for these
three grant projects.

^ŁD	U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

0** Office of Water
\ Washington, DC

I

EPA 841-F-22-001B
PROt^° February 2022

For additional information contact:

Maine Department of Environmental Protection
Wendy Garland

207-615-2451 • wendy.garland@maine.gov
Alex Wong

207-694-9533 • alex.wong@maine.gov


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