Revised Methods for Characterizing Stream Habitat in the National Water-Quality Assessment Program
By Faith A. Fitzpatrick, Ian R. Waite, Patricia J. D.Arconte, Michael R. Meador, Molly A. Maupin, and Martin E. Gurtz
[USGS Water Resources Investigations Report 98-4052]
Abstract
Stream habitat is characterized in the U.S.
Geological Survey's National Water-Quality
Assessment (NAWQA) Program as part of an
integrated physical, chemical, and biological
assessment of the Nation's water quality. The goal
of stream habitat characterization is to relate
habitat to other physical, chemical, and biological
factors that describe water-quality conditions. To
accomplish this goal, environmental settings are
described at sites selected for water-quality
assessment. In addition, spatial and temporal
patterns in habitat are examined at local, regional,
and national scales.
This habitat protocol contains updated methods for evaluating habitat in NAWQA Study Units. Revisions are based on lessons learned after 6 years of applying the original NAWQA habitat protocol to NAWQA Study Unit ecological surveys. Similar to the original protocol, these revised methods for evaluating stream habitat are based on a spatially hierarchical framework that incorporates habitat data at basin, segment, reach, and microhabitat scales. This framework provides a basis for national consistency in collection techniques while allowing flexibility in habitat assessment within individual Study Units. Procedures are described for collecting habitat data at basin and segment scales; these procedures include use of geographic information system data bases, topographic maps, and aerial photographs. Data collected at the reach scale include channel, bank, and riparian characteristics.
| |NAWQA| | |WATER| | |HELP!| |
|
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
Maintainer: Kerie Hitt (kjhitt@usgs.gov) Last update: 13:52:14 Fri 19 Jul 2002 Privacy Statement || Disclaimer || Accessibility URL: http://water.usgs.gov/nawqa/protocols/WRI98-4052/ |
|