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Fact Sheet 2007-3044


Publications Warehouse Fact Sheet 2007-3044

Prepared in cooperation with the Johnson County Stormwater Management Program

Biological Conditions in Streams of Johnson County, Kansas, and Nearby Missouri, 2003 and 2004

Prepared in cooperation with the Johnson County Stormwater Management Program

By Barry C. Poulton, Teresa J. Rasmussen, and Casey J. Lee

FS 2007-3044

Johnson County is one of the fastest growing and most populated counties in Kansas. Urban development affects streams by altering stream hydrology, geomorphology, water chemistry, and habitat, which then can lead to adverse effects on fish and macroinvertebrate communities. In addition, increasing sources of contaminants in urbanizing streams results in public-health concerns associated with exposure to and consumption of contaminated water.

Biological assessments, or surveys of organisms living in aquatic environments, are crucial components of water-quality programs because they provide an indication of how well water bodies support aquatic life. This fact sheet describes current biological conditions of Johnson County streams and characterizes stream biology relative to urban development.

Biological conditions were evaluated by collecting macroinvertebrate samples from 15 stream sites in Johnson County, Kansas, in 2003 and 2004 (fig. 1). Data from seven additional sites, collected as part of a separate study with similar objectives in Kansas and Missouri (Wilkison and others, 2005), were evaluated to provide a more comprehensive assessment of watersheds that cross State boundaries. Land-use and water- and streambed-sediment-quality data also were used to evaluate factors that may affect macroinvertebrate communities.

Metrics are indices used to measure, or evaluate, macroinvertebrate response to various factors such as human disturbance. Multimetric scores, which integrated 10 different metrics that measure various aspects of macroinvertebrate communities, including organism diversity, composition, tolerance, and feeding characteristics, were used to evaluate and compare biological health of Johnson County streams.

This information is useful to city and county officials for defining current biological conditions, evaluating conditions relative to State biological criteria, evaluating effects of urbanization, developing effective water-quality management plans, and documenting changes in biological conditions and water quality.

More Information

For more information about water resources studies in Johnson County, Kansas by the USGS, contact:

Teresa J. Rasmussen
U.S. Geological Survey
Kansas Water Science Center
4821 Quail Crest Place
Lawrence, KS 66049-3839
Telephone: (785) 832-3576
Fax: (785) 832-3500
Email: rasmuss@usgs.gov

For more information about USGS water resources studies in Kansas, visit the USGS Kansas Water Science Center home page: http://ks.water.usgs.gov

Report Citation:

Poulton, B.C., Rasmussen, T.J., and Lee, C.J., 2007, Biological conditions in streams of Johnson County, Kansas, and nearby Missouri, 2003 and 2004: U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet 2007-3044, 2 p.


Posted July 2007

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Last modified: Tuesday, 29-Nov-2016 18:05:35 EST