Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and...

29
NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore Ocean Leslie J. McGeorge, Robert Connell & Alfred L. Korndoerfer NJ Department of Environmental Protection Water Monitoring & Standards National Water Quality Monitoring Conference Atlantic City, NJ May 21, 2008

Transcript of Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and...

Page 1: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey:Headwaters to the Near Shore Ocean

Leslie J. McGeorge, Robert Connell & Alfred L. KorndoerferNJ Department of Environmental Protection

Water Monitoring & Standards

National Water Quality Monitoring ConferenceAtlantic City, NJMay 21, 2008

Page 2: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

OverviewWater Use Assessment

Monitoring Programs• Freshwater • Marine Water & Beach

Monitoring• Nonpoint Source• Volunteer

NJ’s Long-Term Monitoring & Assessment Strategy

Page 3: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Designated Uses

• Aquatic Life• Recreation – primary &

secondary contact• Potable Water • Fish Consumption • Shellfish Harvest • Agriculture Water Supply • Industrial Water Supply

Page 4: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Water Use Assessment

• Goal: Assess all waters for all usesCurrently in NJ:

– > 90% of waterbodies assessed for at least 1 use– ~ 10% assessed for all uses

• Develop Integrated Waterbodies ListIncludes:

– Unimpaired: meets use– Impaired or 303(d): does not meet use

• Compare monitoring results to water quality standards

Page 5: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Freshwater Monitoring

•Where?• Rivers/streams (>18,000 miles at 1:24,000 scale)• Lakes (1100 named lakes)• Shallow Groundwater

• What?• Water column• Sediment• Biological conditions• Habitat• Fish Tissue

Page 6: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Monitoring Program Designs

• Fixed stations• Rotating basins• Probabilistic designs• Targeted monitoring (e.g.,

TMDL support, stressor identification, stormwater monitoring)

Page 7: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Ambient Surface Water Network

• Began – 1970’s• Recreational, Potable &

Aquatic Life uses• Chemical/ physical/

microbiologal parameters• Water column & sediment• 215 stations, 42 randomly

selected every 2 years• Sampled 4x/year• Parameters Include:

– Nutrients– DO– Bacteriological– Metals– Pesticides– Volatile Organics (historical)

• Cooperative program w/ USGS

Page 8: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Groundwater Monitoring Network

(̂(̂

(̂ (̂

(̂(̂

(̂(̂

(̂(̂

(̂(̂

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

&\

$T

$T$T

$T

$T$T

$T

$T

$T$T$T

$T

$T

$T

$T

$T

$T

$T

$T$T

$T

$T

$T$T

$T

$T

$T

$T

$T

$T

%U

%U

%U

%U

%U%U

%U%U %U

%U

%U

%U

%U

%U

%U

%U%U

%U

%U

%U

%U%U

%U

%U

%U

%U

%U

%U%U

%U

#S

#S

#S#S#S

#S

#S

#S

#S

#S

#S

#S#S

#S

#S

#S

#S

#S#S

#S

#S

#S

#S#S#S#S#S

#S

#S

#S

New Jersey'sAmbient Groundwater

Quality Monitoring Network1999 - 2004

-Network will examine shallow grounwater quality as a function of land use-Samples analyzed for VOC's, pesticides, metals, common ions, nutrients and radioactivity-NJGS located and installed wells-NJDEP/WMM and USGS will sample 30 wells/Yr-Setup and sampled on a 5 year cycle

DEP WMA's

2003-2004 Wells(̂ AG(̂ UND(̂ URB

2002 Wells&\ AG

&\ UND&\ URB

2001 Wells$T AG

$T UND

$T URB

2000 Wells%U AG%U UND%U URB

1999 Wells#S AG

UND

#S URB#S

10 0 10 20 Miles

- Cooperative program with NJGS & USGS

- 150 Shallow well network

- Land use-based- Agriculture (60 wells)- Undeveloped (30 wells)- Urban (60 wells)

- 30 sampled/yr for 5 year cycle

- Parameters monitored:nutrients, VOCs, metals, pesticides, radioactivity

- GW also monitored through NJ’s Private Well Testing Act

Page 9: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Benthic Macroinvertebrates -Ambient Biomonitoring Network

(AMNET)

• Program began in 1988 • Indicator of river/stream aquatic health• Over 800 stations (av. 1 station/23 stream miles)• 5 Rotating basins• Sampled 1x/5yrs• Index period – April – Nov• Rapid Bioassessment Protocol• Multi- habitat sampling proportionate to habitats present

Page 10: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Ambient Biological Monitoring

Network Results

AMNET Statewide Results - Round 32002-2007

(811 total sites)

19%

22%

41%

18%

ExcellentGoodFairPoor

Page 11: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Benthic Macroinvertebrate Program Status

• 3 Rounds of all 5 Water Regions complete (approx 2400 samples)

• Single Multi-metric index recently replaced with 3 NJ-customized ecoregion-specific indices– Pinelands– High gradient (adaptable to headwaters)– Coastal Plain – low gradient

• New indices generally at genus level

Page 12: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Fish Index of Biotic Integrity Network (FIBI)Program initiated in

2000 (N. New Jersey)

100 Fixed Site network

20 Sites per Year, 5 Year Rotation

Index Period – June through Mid-October

Round 2 Sampling completed in 2007

Developing S. Jersey index

Page 13: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Fish Index of Biotic (FIBI) Integrity Network Results

Round 2 Scoring (2005-2007)

RatingExcellent Good Fair Poor

Per

cent

0

10

20

30

40

N = 66

Presentation – Session K4, Thurs, 8:00am (John Vile)

Page 14: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Lakes Monitoring Network• 200 Lake network,

40 lakes/year. Began 2004.

• Probabilistic design, using USEPA - GRTS protocol

• Average 3 stations/lake• Parameters selected to

assess lake productivity –physical/chemical only

Presentation – Session J1, Wed, 3:30pm (Victor Poretti)

Page 15: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Ambient Lakes Monitoring NetworkSample Parameters:

Total Phosphorus

Total Kjeldahl Nitrogen

Nitrite+Nitrate Nitrogen

Ammonia Nitrogen

Dissolved Oxygen

Temperature

Specific Conductance

pH

Alkalinity

Hardness

Turbidity

Secchi depths

Chlorophyll “a”

Page 16: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Marine Monitoring for Public Health: Shellfish Harvest Use

• Required by NJ Statute (NJSA 58:24).

• Required by US FDA for interstate sale of shellfish (worth ~$500 million/year to the NJ economy).

• Supporting data for NJ’s Integrated Report to identify impaired shellfish use waters.

• 2,500 locations, 15,000 samples/year for coliform bacteria

Page 17: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Harvestable Acreage Improvements (1976-2008)NJ Shellfish Water Classifications

65%

70%

75%

80%

85%

90%

95%

1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008

Year

Perc

ent o

f All

Wat

ers

Harvestable Approved

Presentation – Session I3, Wed, 1:00pm (Deborah Watkins)

Page 18: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Monitoring for Public Health:Ocean & Bay Beaches - Recreational Use127 miles ocean shoreline 264 locations monitored, including188 ocean beaches and 76 bay beachesMonitored weekly – more frequently if

neededCooperative program with countiesEnterococcus IndicatorCriterion = 104 enterococcus/100 ml

You are here in AC

Page 19: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Marine Monitoring for Public Health:Ocean & Bay Bathing Beaches

Most NJ beaches have never been closed.

In 2007, >93% beaches with no closures.

Monitoring supports $36 billion beach tourism industry in NJ

2007

6.06

93.9

% of beaches that didnot close

% of beaches thatexperienced at leastone closure

% of beaches that experienced 1 or more closures

Presentation – Session K1, 8:00am, Thurs (Virginia Loftin)

Page 20: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Marine Monitoring for Public Health:Ocean Beach Closures

NOTE: Indicator changed from fecal to enterococcus in 2004

2634

49

4 718

3 8 816 9

177

180

1

1

3 6 3

24

16

58 4250

79

85

13

4

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007

Num

ber o

f Clo

sing

s

For Bacteria in Excess of Standard Precautionary Floatables

Ocean Beach Closings 1992 - 2007

Page 21: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Marine Monitoring: Ecosystem Health & Aquatic Life Use• Used for NJ’s

Integrated Report to identify impaired waters.

• 250 locations -1000 samples/year

• DO, nutrients, chlorophyll

Page 22: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Marine Monitoring: Ecosystem Health National Coastal Assessment (NCA)

Program• Part of EPA’s

national probabilistic assessment of estuarine systems

• Includes: Sediment Toxicity

• Sediment Chemistry• Benthic Diversity• Fish Tissue

Page 23: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Nonpoint Source Monitoring

• Applications– Source Tracking– Land use load

estimates for TMDL modeling

Automated flow measurement and sample collection

Mobile laboratory -microbiology & nutrients

Page 24: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

NJ Volunteer Monitoring Program -Watershed Watch Network (started 2002)• 29 River/Stream Monitoring Organizations

– Biological – Visual– Habitat – Chemical– Bacteria

• 58 Lake Monitoring Organizations– Bacteria– Chemical

Page 25: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Volunteer Program OutcomesTraining (e.g., field collection, habitat assessment, data

integration, benthic macroinvertebrates)

Annual Volunteer Monitoring Summit

Technical Assistance - NJ Service Provider Network

Resource Support – Mini-Grant Program

Online Data Management System (under development)

Increased high quality data submissions to NJDEP

Quality Assurance Tiers – dependent on intended data use

Page 26: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

State Water Quality Monitoring & Assessment Strategies

• 10 Year Strategy – EPA requirement for all states

• All Waterbody Types – streams, rivers, lakes, reservoirs, estuaries, coastal areas, wetlands, ground water

• 9 Basic Elements - 1. Objectives, 2. Design, 3. Water Quality Indicators, 4. QA, 5. Data Management, 6. Assessment, 7. Reporting, 8. Program Evaluation, 9. Infrastructure Planning

Page 27: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

NJ’s Water Monitoring & Assessment Strategy

www.nj.gov/dep/wms/longtermstrategyreport.pdf

• NJ Long-Term Strategic Plan (2005-2014)

• Organized by waterbodytype

• Identifies gaps & partnership resource needs

•NJ Water Monitoring Council – partnerships to fill gaps

Page 28: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Example: Strategic Gaps Analysis TableMonitoring Gaps/

EnhancementsGeneral Progress Progress on Filling

GapsCoastal Waters -Nat’l Shellfish Sanitation Program

- Limited non-point source trackingand alternate indicators lab capacity

- No shellfish tissue toxics monitoring

- Limited phytoplankton monitoring

- Alternate Indicators laboratory completed.

- Toxics monitoring in shellfish funded through Supplemental 106 funding.

- Remote sensing equipment installed on DEP plane to target vessel sampling.

NPS - Navesink River - remedial actions being taken by municipality.

Remote Sensing -updating agreement with NJDEP Parks & Forestry on the use of the aircraft.

Page 29: Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey ... · PDF fileNJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards Ambient Water Monitoring Strategies in New Jersey: Headwaters to the Near Shore

NJDEP Water Monitoring and Standards

Summary• Goal – monitoring to assess all waters for all uses and Integrated Waterbodies List

• > 90% of waterbodies assessed for at least 1 use

• ~ 10% assessed for all uses

• Monitoring programs – freshwater, marine, beach monitoring, nonpoint source & volunteer

• State Program augmented by collaboration with USGS, EPA, DRBC, volunteers, counties, etc.

• Strategic gaps ID’d by Long-Term Strategy for potential collaboration