STORIES OF PROGRESS IN ACHIEVING HEALTHY WATERS

^pR0^° EPA Region 3 Water Protection Division

Dam Removal Provides Fish Passage, Water
Quality Benefits

Bishopville, Maryland • June 25, 2015

The Bishopville Pond Dam in Maryland has been replaced with
a series of pools, runs and step-like structures, improving
water quality downstream and providing access for key fish
species to spawn upstream.

The project involved removal of the four-foot high sheet metal
dam and re-establishment of 635 linear feet of stable stream
channel and a three-acre wetland area - opening up about seven
miles of upstream habitat for spawning, and promoting vegetation
to reduce nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment levels in the water.

EPA provided $100,000 for the project through the Maryland
Coastal Bays Program, one of 28 National Estuary Programs
across the country. The funds helped leverage other financing for
the $1.5 million project.

Removal of the 56-year-old dam is allowing fish like the blueback
herring and alewife to move from salt water to fresh water to
spawn. The fish traverse over gradual steps, or weirs, with pools in
between to rest. The American eel also now has a gateway to the
upstream waters. All three species are listed by the National
Marine Fisheries Service as species of special concern for
declining populations on the east coast.

ATA GLANCE

•	Dam removal has opened passage to
spawning grounds for key fish species

•	Project helping to improve water quality

•	EPA provided $100,000 through the
Maryland Coastal Bays Program

•	Govt, partners include U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, MD Department of
Natural Resources

Bishopville, MD

Roman Jesien, science coordinator for the Maryland Coastal Bays
Program, said the alewife and blueback herring are major forage species for commercial fish such as
striped bass, tuna and sea bass. Their decline has put stress on other areas of the ecosystem.

"We are really excited that we saw alewife and white perch using the facility in its first year of
operation," Jesien said. Before the dam was removed, fish would "come up to the dam, slam their
noses against it, and go back." There are photos of young eel trying futilely to scale the dam.

The project, 10 years in the making, is helping to reduce nutrient pollution in the St. Martin's River, a
tributary of the project site, Bunting's Branch. The river, considered the most impaired in the
watershed, flows to Assawoman Bay and then out to the Atlantic Ocean. Bishopville is less than 10
miles northwest of Ocean City, MD, just south of the Delaware state line.

The project removed nutrient-rich sediments that had accumulated above the dam. In addition, the
water flow over the riffles is helping to increase dissolved oxygen levels. More improvements are
expected as vegetation becomes established and increases the time water comes in contact with
denitrifying bacteria. The Maryland Coastal Bays Program will monitor the results of the project over
the next five years.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
EPA Region 3 Water Protection Division
Philadelphia, PA

For additional information contact:

David Greaves, areaves.david@epa.gov
EPA WPD Office of State and Watershed Partnerships
Roman Jesien, riesien@mdcoastaibays.org
Maryland Coastal Bays Program


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