Water Quality

In addition to the Overview information provided for Water Quality, the Agriculture and Wastewater Workgroups have described their priorities and progress in the tabs below. Other important work is being conducted by the Chesapeake Bay Program partnership to restore water quality by implementing pollution reduction practices on urban and suburban lands and reducing pollution deposited in the watershed from the air. Additional information on these efforts will be included over time. Progress in implementing the Bay Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) and in achieving milestones set at the 2009 Executive Council Meeting is also described below.

Nitrogen Yields and Short-Term Trends Measured in Watershed Streams and Rivers: U.S. Geological Survey. Chesapeake Bay watershed 10 year nitrogen flow-adjusted concentration trend and short-term yield indicators. The flow-adjusted trends indicator is calculated, and published annually by the U.S. Geological Survey as part of a larger effort to determine loads and trends in nutrient and sediment concentrations and streamflow in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. A complete description of data analysis methods can be found in Langland, M. J., and others, Changes in streamflow and water quality in selected nontidal basins in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, 1985-2004: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5178, 75 p., available online at http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2006/5178/.

Monitoring

Pollutant loads coming off of the landscape are measured through a network of monitoring sites at numerous stream and river locations throughout the watershed. This information helps us understand whether the load reductions projected through the Bay watershed model are being reflected in measurements taken in the streams and rivers. Using the data collected over many years from these locations, the following trends have been measured.

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