numeric nutrient standard because it is a maintained ditch/canal. Background Healthy, well-balanced stream and river communities may be maintained with some level of human activity, but excessive human disturbance may result in waterbody degradation. Human stressors include increased inputs of nutrients, sediments, and/or other contaminants from watershed runoff, adverse STREAM ECOSUMMARY hydrologic alterations, undesirable removal of habitat or riparian buffer vegetation, and introduction of Pirate Canal at Burnt Store Road nuisance (generally exotic) plants and animals. DEP WBID 2082A, Charlotte County evaluates if human activities have resulted in the condition where a waterbody has exceeded water 10/18/2018 and 5/8/2019 quality criteria (Chapter 62-302, Florida Administrative Code), including whether adverse impacts to biological communities have occurred. DEP water quality standards are designed to protect designated uses of the waters of the state (e.g., recreation, aquatic life use support), and exceedances of these standards is associated with interference with the designated use. Additionally, DEP evaluates the health of floral (plants and algae) and faunal (animal) communities and conducts habitat assessments to diagnose potential physical impacts. However, Pirate Canal does not comply with the NNC because it is a man-made, physically Figure 1. Pirate Canal in Charlotte County on maintained canal that is primarily used for water 5/18/2018. management purposes and has poor stream habitat components. Physical, chemical, and biological sampling was conducted at Pirate Canal (WIN/STORET G2SD0037) in Charlotte County on 10/18/2018 and 5/8/2019 by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection’s (DEP) Division of Environmental Assessment and Restoration South Regional Operations Center. This stream was sampled as part of the Strategic Monitoring Program (SMP). Overall, based on water quality data and floral assessments from the sampling events discussed in this report, this system does not meet the nutrient numeric standard for streams, but the site may be excluded from the Figure 2. Location of Pirate Canal in Charlotte County. 7/7/2020 restore habitats for native wildlife. Prescribed burns, physical and chemical removal of invasive species, Site Description and timber thinning are some of the methods used to The Pirate Canal sampling site (Figure 1) is located manage this area. near Burnt Store Road in the Charlotte Harbor Watershed (WBID 2082A, Figure 2). It is a first-order The Landscape Development Intensity (LDI) quantifies the intensity of human activity in the stream draining the Southwestern Florida Flatwoods, surrounding area based on land use and land cover a subecoregion of the Southern Coastal Plain and is normalized on a scale from 1 to 10, where a ecoregion. Pirate Canal receives a portion of the runoff from the Babcock-Webb Wildlife Management natural land use has a coefficient of 1.0 and a central business district has a coefficient of 10.0. The LDI Area (WMA), and flows into Charlotte Harbor. The score for this site is 2.86, which suggests relatively low Babcock-Webb WMA is managed by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. It is within the human impact in the 100m buffer surrounding the 90 square miles of hydrological restoration area of stream. However, this score was determined using data from 2012 and recent construction on Burnt the Charlotte Harbor Flatwoods Initiative, whose goal is to restore slow velocity sheet flow across this Store Road has likely affected the score, requiring landscape reevaluation. An example of human disturbance is mechanical removal of vegetation, as is shown in (https://chnep.wateratlas.usf.edu/charlotte-harbor- flatwoods-initiative/). Figure 3. The WBID is currently listed for dissolved oxygen (DO) on the Impaired Waters Verified List. Additional information about this WBID is available in the TMDL Tracker application (http://prodenv.dep.state.fl.us/DearTmdl/welcomeh z.do Methods Water Quality Surface water samples were collected for analysis of nutrients, chlorophyll a, and color during both events. In addition, metals, markers and tracers, and pesticides were also collected in 2019. All sampling was conducted following DEP Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs, see https://floridadep.gov/dear/quality- assurance/content/dep-sops for details) and met the requirements of the FDEP Quality Assurance Rule, Chapter 62-160, F.A.C. Figure 3. Mechanical removal of vegetation is (https://www.flrules.org/gateway/ChapterHome.asp apparent along the northern bank on 3/25/2020 ?Chapter=62-160). Results were compared with (Photo by Miranda Carroll). applicable Class III water quality criteria contained in 62-302, F.A.C., including nutrients, dissolved oxygen, Current land use around Pirate Canal is a combination and other indicators. of natural and developed areas. The areas within the Babcock-Webb WMA are managed to preserve and 7/7/2020 Chapter 62-302.531, F.A.C., provides that Numeric factors on the resident aquatic organisms. HA scores Nutrient Criteria (NNC) are achieved in streams if: range from 11-160 and overall habitat quality is information on chlorophyll a levels, algal mats or assigned to one of four categories: Optimal (120-160 blooms, nuisance macrophyte growth, and changes in points), Suboptimal (80-119 points), Marginal (40-79 algal species composition do not indicate an points), and Poor (11-39 points). imbalance in flora or fauna; and either: Floral Assessment The average score of at least two temporally Evaluations of stream flora include the Rapid independent Stream Condition Indices (SCIs) is 40 or Periphyton Survey (RPS, DEP SOP FS 7230), higher, with neither of the two most recent SCI scores community composition information associated with less than 35, OR dominant algal taxa (where applicable), Linear The nutrient thresholds (expressed as annual Vegetation Survey (LVS, DEP SOP 7320), and geometric means) are not exceeded more than once chlorophyll a. The LVS accounts for each plant in a three-year period. The nutrient thresholds are species’ Coefficient of Conservatism (C of C) score region-specific. This sampling site is in the Peninsula which is assigned by expert botanists that indicates nutrient region. The floral and faunal measures are the plant’s specific habitat requirements. Plants with described below. higher C of C scores have a greater sensitivity to disturbances or changes to their habitat, while a plant Dissolved Oxygen with a score of 0 is highly tolerant of variable habitats, Rule 62-302.533 (1), F.A.C., states that no more than and includes invasive exotic species listed by the 10 percent of the daily average percent DO saturation Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council (FLEPPC). The RPS values shall be below 67 percent in the Panhandle assesses the extent and thickness of algae in the West bioregion, 38 percent in the Peninsula and stream reach, while the LVS assesses how closely the Everglades bioregions, or 34 percent in the Northeast in-stream plant community resembles a minimally and Big Bend bioregions. This site is in the Peninsula disturbed condition. Results are assessed as bioregion for DO criteria assessment. Factors such as described beginning on page 8 of “Implementation of temperature, atmospheric pressure, and salinity Florida’s Numeric Nutrient Standards,” dated April influence percent DO saturation. 2013, using evidentiary thresholds derived from a population of minimally disturbed reference sites. The daily average freshwater DO criteria is preferentially assessed using daily average values The FLEPPC determines a list of invasive plants that calculated from full days of diel (collected over a 24 effect the biodiversity of native plant communities to hour period) monitoring data. If diel monitoring data inform pest plant management decisions. DEP utilizes are not available (as was the case for this report), the FLEPPC list when conducting LVS assessments to instantaneous samples are used to assess the DO determine the percent “LVS FLEPPC” for a stream or criterion by comparing the instantaeous value with a river, which is the percentage of aquatic macrophytes time-of-day-specific translation of the daily average that are invasive within a waterbody. criterion (62-303.420(9), F.A.C.). Faunal Assessment Habitat Assessment The SCI assesses how closely the macroinvertebrate Stream Habitat Assessments (HA) were conducted community (e.g., aquatic insects, clams, crayfish) of a per DEP SOP FT 3100. The HA is a rapid field method stream resembles the macroinvertebrate community in which a sampler scores eight in-stream and riparian of an undisturbed or “reference” condition. The SCI components to estimate the influence of habitat was sampled and calculated per DEP SOP SCI 1000. 7/7/2020 For the SCI, ten measures of macroinvertebrate health are calculated and summed to yield a final score from 0-100. Average SCI scores ≥ 40 are Results considered “Healthy” (as long as neither of the latest Water Quality two SCI scores were < 35) with scores ≥ 64 considered The water quality results are shown in Table 1. “Exceptional.” The SCI is part of the NNC evaluation Alkalinity and conductivity were substantially lower for streams, as described above, and serves as a while color and TKN were higher during October 2018 biological health assessment tool in 62-303, F.A.C., sampling. In addition to nutrients, samples were DEP’s Impaired Waters Rule. An SCI was conducted at analyzed for metals, markers, tracers, and pesticides this location to evaluate whether further monitoring during the May 2019 sampling event. Several should be conducted, and whether this location pesticides/herbicides were detected including: 2,4-D would be appropriate as a reference for sites that (0.038 µg/L), atrazine (3.8 µg/L), atrazine desethyl may score low for HA but meet thresholds for (1.9 I µg/L), hexazinone (1.2 µg/L), metolachlor (1.0 biological sampling. µg/L), imazapyr (0.082 µg/L), imidacloprid (0.0033 µg/L), and fluridone (0.0015 I µg/L).
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