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Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5116

Prepared in cooperation with the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality, Office of Pollution Control

Characterization of Water Quality in Unmonitored Streams in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain, Northwestern Mississippi, May–June 2006

By Jeannie R. Bryson, Richard H. Coupe, and Michael A. Manning

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Scientific Investigations Report
2007-5116 PDF (2 MB)
Abstract

The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality is required to develop restoration and remediation plans for water bodies not meeting their designated uses, as stated in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Water Act section 303(d). The majority of streams in northwestern Mississippi are on the 303(d) list of water-quality limited waters. Agricultural effects on streams in northwestern Mississippi have reduced the number of unimpaired streams (reference streams) for water-quality comparisons. As part of an effort to develop an index to assess impairment, the U.S. Geological Survey collected water samples from 52 stream sites on the 303(d) list during May-June 2006, and analyzed the samples for nutrients and chlorophyll. The data were analyzed by trophic group as determined by total nitrogen concentrations. Seven constituents (nitrite plus nitrate, total Kjeldhal nitrogen, total phosphorus, orthophosphorus, total organic carbon, chlorophyll a, and pheophytina) and four physical property measurements (specific conductance, pH, turbidity, and dissolved oxygen) were determined to be significantly different (p < 0.05) between trophic groups. Total Kjeldhal nitrogen, turbidity, and dissolved oxygen were used as indicators of stream productivity with which to infer stream health. Streams having high total Kjeldhal nitrogen values and high turbidity values along with low dissolved oxygen concentrations were typically eutrophic abundant in nutrients), whereas streams having low total Kjeldhal nitrogen values and low turbidity values along with high dissolved oxygen concentrations were typically oligotrophic (deficient in nutrients).

Version 1.0

Posted October 2007


Suggested citation:

Bryson, J.R., Coupe, R.H., and Manning, M.A., 2007, Characterization of water quality in unmonitored streams in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain, northwestern Mississippi, May-June 2006: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5116, 20 p.



Contents

Abstract

Introduction

Purpose and Scope

Description of Study Area

Acknowledgments

Data Collection and Analysis

Sample Collection and Processing

Quality Assurance and Control

Statistical Methods

Water Quality and Trophic Status of Streams

Characterization of Streams Using Indicators of Trophic Classifications

Summary

References

Figures and Tables

Appendixes

 


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