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Scientific Investigations Report 2013–5062

Prepared in cooperation with the City of Durham

Water-Quality Characteristics, Trends, and Nutrient and Sediment Loads of Streams in the Treyburn Development Area, North Carolina, 1988–2009

By Jason M. Fine, Douglas A. Harned, and Carolyn J. Oblinger

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Abstract

Streamflow and water-quality data, including concentrations of nutrients, metals, and pesticides, were collected from October 1988 through September 2009 at six sites in the Treyburn development study area. A review of water-quality data for streams in and near a 5,400-acre planned, mixed-use development in the Falls Lake watershed in the upper Neuse River Basin of North Carolina indicated only small-scale changes in water quality since the previous assessment of data collected from 1988 to 1998. Loads and yields were estimated for sediment and nutrients, and temporal trends were assessed for specific conductance, pH, and concentrations of dissolved oxygen, suspended sediment, and nutrients.

Water-quality conditions for the Little River tributary and Mountain Creek may reflect development within these basins. The nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations at the Treyburn sites are low compared to sites nationally. The herbicides atrazine, metolachlor, prometon, and simazine were detected frequently at Mountain Creek and Little River tributary but concentrations are low compared to sites nationally.

Little River tributary had the lowest median suspended-sediment yield over the 1988–2009 study period, whereas Flat River tributary had the largest median yield. The yields estimated for suspended sediment and nutrients were low compared to yields estimated for other basins in the Southeastern United States.

Recent increasing trends were detected in total nitrogen concentration and suspended-sediment concentrations for Mountain Creek, and an increasing trend was detected in specific conductance for Little River tributary. Decreasing trends were detected in dissolved nitrite plus nitrate nitrogen, total ammonia plus organic nitrogen, sediment, and specific conductance for Flat River tributary.

Water chemical concentrations, loads, yields, and trends for the Treyburn study sites reflect some effects of upstream development. These measures of water quality are generally low, however, compared to regional and national averages.

First posted June 14, 2013

For additional information contact:
Director, North Carolina Water Science Center
U.S. Geological Survey
3916 Sunset Ridge Road
Raleigh, NC 27607
(919) 571–4000
http://nc.water.usgs.gov/

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Suggested citation:

Fine, J.M., Harned, D.A., and Oblinger, C.J., 2013, Water-quality characteristics, trends, and nutrient and sediment loads of streams in the Treyburn development area, North Carolina, 1988–2009: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2013–5062, 59 p., http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2013/5062.



Contents

Abstract

Introduction

Data Collection

Streamflow Conditions

Water-Quality Conditions

Water-Quality Seasonality

Estimation of Nutrient and Sediment Loads and Yields

Trend Analysis

Summary

References Cited


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