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Watershed surveys to support an assessment of the regional effects of acidic deposition on surface water chemistry
Authors:Jeffrey Lee  Robbins Church  Duane Lammers  Leon Liegel  Mark Johnson  Deborah Coffey  Richard Holdren  Donald Stevens  Robert Turner  Louis Blume
Institution:(1) Environmental Research Laboratory, United States Environmental Protection Agency, 200 SW 35 St., 97333 Corvallis, Oregon, USA;(2) Environmental Research Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service, 200 SW 35 St., 97333 Corvallis, Oregon, USA;(3) Environmental Research Laboratory, NSI Technology Services Corporation, 200 SW 35 St., 97333 Corvallis, Oregon, USA;(4) Mathematics Department, Eastern Oregon State College, 97850 LaGrande, Oregon, USA;(5) Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, P.O. Box X, 37830 Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA;(6) Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory, United States Environmental Protection Agency, P.O. Box 15027, 89114 Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
Abstract:Through the Direct/Delayed Response Project (DDRP), the United States Environmental Protection Agency is attempting to assess the risk to surface waters from acidic deposition in three regions of the eastern United States: the Northeast Region, the Southern Blue Ridge Province, and the Mid-Appalachian Region. The central policy question being addressed by the DDRP is: Within the regions of concern, how many surface water systems (lakes, streams) will become acidic due to current or altered levels of acidic sulfur deposition, and on what time scales? The approach taken by the DDRP is to select a statistically representative set of watersheds in each region of concern and to project the future response of each watershed to various assumed levels of acidic deposition. The probability structure will then be used to extrapolate the watershed-specific results to each region. The data will be used also for statistical investigation of hypothesized relationships between current surface water chemistry and watershed characteristics. Because the needed terrestrial data base was not available, regional watershed surveys were conducted to meet the specific data needs of the DDRP. Maps (1∶24,000) of soils, vegetation, land use, depth to bedrock, and bedrock geology were made for each watershed. The soils were grouped into sampling classes based on their hypothesized response to acidic deposition. Randomized sampling of these classes provided regional means and variances of soil properties that can be applied to individual watersheds. Because of DDRP's need for consistency within and among regions, unique quality control/quality assurance activities were developed and implemented. After verification and validation, the DDRP data base will be made publicly available. This will be a unique and useful resource for others investigating watershed relationships on a regional scale. The results of these surveys and the conclusions of the DDRP will be presented in several future papers. The current paper gives an overview of the context, rationale, logistical considerations, and implementation of these surveys, with special emphasis on the field activities of watershed mapping and soil sampling. This discussion should be useful to those planning, implementing, and managing survey activities in support of regional assessments of other environmental concerns, who are likely to face similar choices and constraints.
Keywords:Acidic deposition  Soil surveys  Watersheds  Regional risk assessment  Eastern United States
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