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Effects of flow alteration on ecological health of streams across the Atlantic Highlands Ecoregion

Dates

End Date
2015

Summary

Problem: The Clean Water Act (PL 92-500) requires that the health of the Nation’s rivers and streams be assessed on a regular basis, and in the Northeast such assessments often use information from aquatic biological communities that live in the stream. Biomonitoring programs implemented by individual states evaluate biological data to assess stream health on the premise that certain sensitive species that are native to the region cannot survive when water quality is poor. The aquatic community data are typically condensed into a set of biological condition metrics that are scaled numerically to convey the relative degree of stream impairment (e.g., excellent, good, fair, poor). However, biological condition metrics generally are [...]

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Attached Files

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LK00-CRM445-Fig1.jpg
“Atlantic Highlands Flow Ecology Sites”
thumbnail 769.08 KB image/jpeg
LK00-CRM445-Fig3.jpg
“Androscoggin River at Gorham, NH”
thumbnail 667.27 KB image/jpeg
LK00-CRM445-Fig4.jpg
“Hydropsychidae”
thumbnail 62.24 KB image/jpeg
LK00-CRM445-Fig2.jpg
“New Croton Dam near Croton-on-Hudson, NY”
thumbnail 15.82 KB image/jpeg
Shapefile: Murray_Atlantic_Highlands_Flow_Ecology_Project.zip
Murray_Atlantic_Highlands_Flow_Ecology_Project.shp 64.84 KB
Murray_Atlantic_Highlands_Flow_Ecology_Project.dbf 127 Bytes
Murray_Atlantic_Highlands_Flow_Ecology_Project.shx 108 Bytes
Murray_Atlantic_Highlands_Flow_Ecology_Project.prj 424 Bytes

Project Extension

parts
typeShort Project Description
valueBiological condition metrics generally are interpreted as reflecting changes in the chemical characteristics of water quality, even though changes in the physical characteristics of stream flow and water temperature also affect stream ecological health. Therefore, an effort to establish a set biological condition metrics indicative of changing stream-flow and temperature regimes is important, especially regarding levels of uncertainty in the ecological effects of climate change. Our project goal is to develop a predicative model for forested streams in the northeast that will indicate how the ecological health of streams is affected when flow and temperature regimes are altered.
projectStatusActive

Atlantic Highlands Flow Ecology Sites
Atlantic Highlands Flow Ecology Sites

Map

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ScienceBase WMS

ScienceBase WFS

Communities

  • USGS New York Water Science Center

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Additional Information

Alternate Titles

  • Atlantic Highland Flow Ecology

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
projectId BASIS+ DH00-CRM445

Shapefile Extension

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