The Importance Of Watershed Protection
What
is a Watershed?
How
Healthy is Your Stream?
Pollutants
at Large in your Watershed
Erosion
Management Guidelines
Welcome
to the country! You and your family and animals have become a very
important part of a new watershed. The practices you use on your property
will not only have an impact (negatively or positively) on the property
of which you live, but can impact your neighbors as well. Let’s start
with the basics:
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What
is a watershed?
A very
basic definition states that a watershed is an area of land that drains
into an underground water supply; local stream, lake, small holding
pond, or wetlands. Everything you do on your property can have an
impact on the people, land, and water that make up your local watershed.
As rain falls, snow melts, or irrigation runs down the hill into the
soil, they carry sediment, nutrients, or other materials.
Why
should you care about your watershed?
We
all live in a watershed and everything we do on our property can have
a negative impact.
The
land drains into tributaries and these streams or creeks flow into
bigger rivers. As this water flows downhill it moves over the soil.
Along the way, the water picks up many different particles of debris
(leaves or soil particles), sediments that can have negative impacts
on the water quality. Water can pick up as it flows: motor oil, fertilizers,
pesticides and eroded soil. Driving a car that’s leaking oil or antifreeze,
fertilizing your pasture or lawn, or not picking up after your pet
can pollute the watershed you live in. Remember that each of you can
make a positive or negative difference on your watershed.
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How
Healthy is Your Stream?
There
are thousands of small acreage farms that cover thousands of acres
in Colorado. Singly, one farm may cause little pollution. But added
together, small acreage can significantly impact a watershed. A stream
reflects your management of the land and water. Proper upland and
in-stream measures can result in clean water for fish, drinking, and
swimming. You can check the health of your stream by using your eyes
and legs.
-
Water
color -- Clear water is often found during low flows. Muddy
color occurs during high flows and when upstream activities send
sediment downstream. Tea-colored water often comes from the brown
tannin of decaying leaves. Colored sheen may indicate an oil spill.
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Foam -- Froth on a stream can be natural or human -caused. Natural
foam has an earthy or fishy smell. Soap or detergent foam will
have a perfume smell.
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Stream
sediment -- If gravel and cobbles are present, less
than 25 percent of the gravel, cobble, and boulder spaces should
be filled with sediment. A marginal to poor condition exists if
more than 50 percent of the spaces are filled.
-
Algae
color -- Algae thrives on nutrients from commercial fertilizers,
leaf waste, and manure. Light or dark green algae scattered in
spots indicates a healthy stream. Matted or hairy algae mean poor
stream quality. Brown algae points to sediment deposits.
An
algae bloom indicates excess nutrients.
-
Stream
bank erosion -- Bare spots on steam- banks may indicate an
unhealthy stream. Wooded stream banks seldom erode, even in high
floods. Steep banks, frequent tree fall, and more than 10 percent
bank erosion along a stretch of stream may indicate erosion problems.
-
Riffles
-- Riffles occur when water runs over rocky or rough streambeds.
A mix of riffles and quiet pools provide good fish habitat. The
ideal habitat for many aquatic animals is a streambed with cobbles
of 2 to 10 inches in diameter.
-
Fish
shelter -- Submerged logs and dead trees provide good fish
habitat.
-
Stream
shade -- Trees overhanging more than 50 percent of
the stream bank provide good fish habitat. Less than 50 percent
indicates fair to poor habitat.
-
Stream
temperature -- If you have a thermometer handy, measuring
a temperature less than 50 degrees is good, 50 - 64 degrees is
fair, and more than 64 degrees is poor. Warm water threatens salmon,
trout, and steelhead. Temperature is an important water standard
in Colorado.
Source
by: Save Our Streams, Izaak Walton League; Rangeland Watershed Management
Program Stream Watercoure Site Evaluation, Oregon State University;
Vermont Stream Bank Conservation Manual, Agency of Environmental Conservation.
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Pollutants
at Large in your Watershed
Pollutants
at Large in your Watershed
Point
source pollution is pollution that comes from one source, such
as a factory pipe outlet. Non-point source pollution is pollution
that comes from many different sources, such as over fertilized lawns,
trampled stream banks, or eroding pastures. Test your non-point knowledge.
The
following table source is Adapted from guidance Specifying Measures
for Sources of Non-point Pollution in Coastal Water, US Environmental
protection Agency.
Pollutant |
Non-point
Source |
Impact |
Bacteria |
|
-
Bacteria
contaminate drinking water and swimming areas.
-
People
eating contaminated fish, shellfish can contact hepatitis,
stomach and intestinal problems, etc.
|
High
Temperature,
Low
Dissolved
Oxygen,
Salinity |
-
Straightened
streams.
-
Dikes
and dams.
-
Upland
practices, e.g., stream shade removed, poor grazing practices,
drained wetlands.
-
Plant
litter, e.g., leaves and lawn trimmings dumped into ditches.
-
Irrigation
leaching.
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-
High
temperature reduces oxygen.
-
Plant
decay process uses up oxygen.
-
Low
oxygen and high salinity stunt reproduction, increase diseases,
and kill fish.
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Phosphorus
Nitrogen |
manure.
-
Landscape,
lawn, & garden fertilizers.
-
Pet
excrement.
-
Septic
tanks poorly sited or maintained.
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-
Nutrients
cause algae blooms that die and lower oxygen levels.
-
Noxious
alga blooms & discolored water limit recreation.
-
Nitrates
in ground water kill livestock and sicken infants.
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Sediment |
-
Erosion
from poor grazing practices, tilling ground, logging roads.
-
Sheet,
rill, & gully erosion
-
Dredging,
stream bank erosion.
-
Bed
scour from straightened streams.
·
Construction, land clearing
·
Natural erosion. |
-
Sediment
fills wetlands, destroys habitat, & smothers feeding &
spawning areas.
-
Sediment
carries nutrients.
-
Ports
are dredged more often
-
Cities
have increased costs to filter drinking water.
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Heavy
Metals |
|
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Car
Pollutants |
-
Fuel,
antifreeze, grease, brake-lining particles, & exhaust
from cars
-
Runoff
from roads, parking lots, and driveways
|
-
Petroleum
products accumulate in sediment, resist breakdown, & are
toxic to fish in low amounts
-
Potential
carcinogen in people.
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Human-Made
Chemicals |
-
Batteries,
pesticides, household cleaners, and paints
-
Poor
storage handling and disposal of hazardous chemicals
|
-
Pesticides
kill aquatic insects and reduce fish food supply
-
Some
pesticides cause bone defects & reproductive problems
in fish
-
Unknown
effects in people
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What
You Can Do
We
are powerful because every action matters in a watershed. Consider
developing a conservation plan and using conservation measures to
protect, care for, and enhance your property values and watershed
health. To get started, follow the guidance in this booklet, which
describes conservation tips for small acreage landowners. One of the
most important steps you can take to protect your watershed is to
protect your land from erosion.
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EROSION
MANAGEMENT GUIDELINES
Every
cubic inch of topsoil may contain over a billion creatures – mostly
bacteria, microbes, and fungi. This tiny ecosystem recycles dead plant
matter back into nutrients that support plant growth. When the upper
8 inches of soil stays put, this living layer produces:
Some
soil erosion is natural, but accelerated erosion is not. A canopy
of trees and shrubs, a thick leaf layer, or dense stand of grass protects
soils in its natural state when raindrops fall or winds blow. We speed
up erosion by removing this protective blanket when we use poor management
during tillage, grazing, timber harvest, or construction. Wind and
water erosion create sterile soils, fill the air with dust, plug road
ditches, carry pollutants, and clog fish habitat. It pays economically
and environmentally to keep soil in place.
KEEPING
SOIL ON YOUR LAND
Here’s
how conservation measures reduce erosion:
-
Create
a protective cover. Plant cover, more than anything else, keeps
soil erosion in check.
-
Erect
barriers to wind and water. Barriers slow wind and water and trap
eroded soils.
-
Reduce
slope length and steepness.
One
conservation practice does not fit every erosion problem. Your soils,
climate, topography, and land use will require a unique set of measures.
Here’s a sampling of conservation measures that can be used whether
you have a large garden or a field crop. They are often more effective
in combination than alone:
-
Buffers
of trees, shrubs, and/or grass slow water speed, filter pollutants,
and trap sediment.
-
Conservation
tillage reduces the amount of tillage and leaves at least 30 percent
cover from crop residue after harvest.
-
Contour
farming runs rows "on the level" around the hill rather
than up and down the slope
-
Crop
rotation changes crop each year in a certain order
-
Erosion
control structure
-
Grassed
waterway
-
Special
planting in critical areas
-
Terraces
are long, low dikes of earth that follow the contour of the hill.
-
Wind
barriers are strips of grass, shrubs, or trees that slow wind.
Grass barriers are one to two rows of tall grass planted perpendicular
to the wind to protect crops, provide wildlife food and cover,
and trap snow.
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C.A.R.T
- A Manual for Success, 2nd Edition
Complete
information on this and many other Small Acreage topics are now available
in
C.A.R.T
- A Manual for Success, 2nd Edition

To obtain
a copy of this book please contact the Adams County Small Acreage Coordinator
303.637.8157
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