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St. Joseph River Watershed Initiative Text-Only Website

Glossary of Terms   Materials for Loan

Glossary of Terms

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

A

Algae
Simple, rootless plants that grow in bodies of water in relative proportion to the amounts of nutrients available. Blue-green algae are primitive algae, typically found in water high in phosphorus that form scum blooms that congregate at the water’s surface. Diatoms are algae that have silica in their cell walls.

ARS
Agricultural Research Service

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B

Bacteria
Single celled organisms having no cellular nucleus. Pathogenic bacteria are capable of causing disease. Coliform bacteria are prolific in the intestines of warm blooded animals and are used as an indicator of fecal waste pollution.

Benthic
Bottom terrain (generally submerged under water) of a surface water body, from shoreline to greatest depths.

Best Management Practices (BMPs)
Methods, measures or practices to prevent or reduce surface runoff and/or water pollution, including but not limited to, structural non-structural controls, operation and maintenance procedures, other requirements and scheduling and distribution of activities.

BMP
Best management practice

BOD
Biological oxygen demand

Buffer
An area maintained in permanent vegetation and managed to reduce the impacts of adjacent land use.

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C

CCWP
Cedar Creek Wildlife Project

CES
Cooperative Extension Service

CFS
Cubic feet per second

Channelization
The practice of straightening a waterway to remove meanders in order to increase the column and/or rate of discharge. Sometimes concrete is used to line the sides and bottom of the channel.

Confluence
The flowing together of two or more streams. A point of juncture.

Cryptosporidium
A protozoan of the genus cryptosporidium that is an intestinal parasite in humans and other vertebrates and some times causes diarrhea that is especially severe in immuno-compromised (weakened immune system) individuals.

CSO
Combined Sewer Overflow

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D

Detention/Retention Basin
Impoundment constructed to detain/retain stormwater for extended periods of time and allow for the retention of pollutants in the pond through deposition of sediments and attached pollutants.

Discharge
1. Release of water at a given point into a water body. 2. The rate and volume of flow of water such as in a stream, generally expressed as cubic feet per second.

Dissolved Oxygen (DO)
Amount of oxygen gas dissolved in a given quantity of water at a given temperature and atmospheric pressure. It is usually expressed as a concentration in parts per million or as a percentage of saturation.

DNR
Department of Natural Resources

DO
Dissolved oxygen

Downcutting
Process of the stream channel bottom being rapidly and excessively eroded creating a deeply incised stream channel.

Drinking Water Standards
In the U.S. National Primary Drinking Water Regulations ((NPDWRs or primary standards) are legally enforceable standards that apply to public water systems. Primary standards protect health by limiting the levels of contaminants in drinking water.

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E

Ecosystem
The system formed by the interaction of a community of organisms with their environment.

Ecosystem Management
The careful and skillful use of ecological, economic, social, and managerial principles in managing ecosystems to produce, restore, or sustain ecosystem integrity and desired uses, products, and services over the long term.

EPA
Environmental Protection Agency

Erosion
The wearing away of land surface by water or wind which occurs naturally from weather or runoff, but is often intensified by human activities.

ET
Evapo-transpiration

Eutrophic
Habitats, particularly soils and water, that are rich in nutrients and plant growth. Eutrophic waters generally have high sedimentation at their bottoms. The lower levels of eutrophic waters have very low levels of dissolved oxygen.

Eutrophication
The aging process by which lakes, estuaries, or water bodies are fertilized with nutrients. Natural eutrophication changes the character of a lake or water body, very gradually. Cultural eutrophication is the accelerated aging of a lake or water body resulting from human activities. The process by which nutrients increase in the water body, increasing algal growth. Then as algal blooms die off and fall to the bottom, their decay depletes the water body of dissolved oxygen, which in turn reduces the ability of the water body to support fish and other aquatic life.

Evapotranspiration
The total loss of water to the atmosphere by evaporation from land and water surface and by transpiration from plants.

Exotic (or invasive) Species
An organism that is out of its naturally occurring range and environment, and occupying the habitat of native species.

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F

Filter Strip
A linear strip of land maintained to slow the velocity of runoff and filter sediment.

Filtration
The mechanical process which removes particulate matter by separating water from solid material, usually by passing it through sand. .

Flooding
Occurs when the total volume of surface water runoff and baseflow entering a stream channel exceeds the capacity of the channel resulting in out-of-bank flow.

Floodplain
That portion of a stream valley adjacent to the channel that is created by erosion and sediment deposited from the stream and covered with water when the stream overflows its banks at flood stage. Also, the nearly level land situated on either side of a channel that is subject to overflow flooding.

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G

GIS
Geographic information system

GLC
Great Lakes Commission

Grassed Waterway
Grass established in a shaped drainageway to prevent gullies from forming.

Ground Water
Water that occurs in the subsurface and fills or saturates the porous openings, factures and fissures of under-ground soils and rock units.

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H

Habitat
A place where the physical and biological elements of ecosystems provide a suitable environment and the food, cover, and space resources needed for plant and animal livelihood.

Headwaters
The uppermost tributaries of a stream or river; often refers to first order streams.

HUC
Hydrologic unit code

Hydrology
The study of the properties, distribution, circulation, and effects of water on the Earth’s surface, soil, and atmosphere.

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I

IDEM
Indiana Department of Environmental Management

IDNR
Indiana Department of Natural Resources

Impaired Stream
A stream or other surface water body determined by field assessment to no longer meet the state water quality standards for its designated protected use.

Impervious Surface
Ground cover that does not allow, or minimally allows, for infiltration of water (e.g., roofs, paved parking lots, and roads) and which increases the volume and speed of runoff after a rainfall.

Infiltration
Movement of surface water into the soil, where it is absorbed by plant roots, evaporated into the atmosphere, or percolates downward to recharge ground water.

Intermittent Stream
A defined channel in which surface water is absent during a portion of the year, as ground water levels drop below the channel bottom.

IPFW
Indiana University – Purdue University

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L

Loading
The total amount (generally measured in pounds or kilograms per acre per year) of material (sediment, nutrients, oxygen-demanding material, or other chemicals or compounds) brought into a lake, stream or water body by inflowing streams, runoff, direct discharge through pipes, ground water, the air (aerial or atmosphere deposition) and other sources over a specific period of time (often annually).

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M

Macroinvertebrate
Invertebrate animal (without back bones) large enough to be observed without the aid of a microscope or other magnification.

Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL)
The designation given by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to water-quality standards promulgated under the Safe Drinking Water Act. The MCL is the greatest amount of a contaminant that can be present in drinking water without causing a risk to human health.

Meander
A circuitous winding or bend in the river.

MRBC
Maumee River Basin Commission

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N

Native Species
A naturally occurring plant or other organism that is within its range and normal environment.

Nitrate
A salt of nitric acid; a common water pollutant.

Nonpoint Source
Nutrient and pollution sources not discharged from a single point, e.g. runoff from agricultural fields, feedlots, residential lawns, septic leach fields, or urban streets, etc.

NPS
Nonpoint source

NRCS
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

NSERL
National Soil Erosion Research Laboratory (West Lafayette, Indiana)

Nutrient
Elements or compounds essential to growth and development of living things (e.g., nitrogen, potassium, phosphorus).

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P

Parts Per Million (PPM)
A common basis of reporting water analysis. One part per million (PPM) equals one pound per million pounds of water. One part per billion (PPB) equals one pound per billion pounds of water.

Pathogen
Microorganism which can cause disease. .

Percolation
1. The slow seepage of water into and through the ground. 2. The slow seepage of water through a filter medium 3. The movement, under hydrostatic pressure, of water through the interstices of a rock or soil.

pH
A measure of the relative acidity or alkalinity of water. Water with a pH of 7 is neutral; lower pH levels indicate increasing acidity, while pH levels higher than 7 indicate increasingly basic solutions.

Phosphate
Salt of phosphoric acid, often found in fertilizers.

Point Source Pollution
Water pollution coming from a single point, such as a sewage-outflow pipe.

Pollution
The process of contaminating air, water and land with impurities to a level that is undesirable and results in a decrease in usefulness of the environment for beneficial purposes.

PPB
Parts per billion

PPM
Parts per million

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Q

QAPP
Quality Assurance Project Plan

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R

Recharge
The replenishment of ground water through the infiltration of rainfall, other surface waters, or land application of water or treated wastewater.

Retention
The prevention of direct discharge of stormwater runoff into receiving waters by temporary containment in a pond or depression; examples include systems which discharge by percolation to ground water, exfiltration, and/or evaporation process and which generally have residence times of less than three days.

Retention Time
The length of time that water, nutrients, or other chemical substances remain in a lake, impoundment or standing pool. .

Riffle
Shallow section of a stream or river with rapid current and a surface broken by gravel, rubble, or boulders.

Riparian
Pertaining to anything connected with or immediately adjacent to the banks of a stream or other body of water.

Riparian Forest Buffer
An area of trees, usually accompanied by shrubs and other vegetation, adjacent to a body of water and managed to maintain the integrity of stream channels and shorelines to 1) reduce the impact of upland sources of pollution by trapping, filtering, and converting sediments, nutrients, and other chemicals, and 2) supply food, cover, and thermal protection to fish and other wildlife.

Riprap
Stones of varying size used to dissipate energy or stabilize a soil surface.

Runoff
Surface water (usually rainfall) that is not evaporated, transpired, used, or infiltrated into the ground water system, and thus flows over land to a surface water body.

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S

Salinity
The relative proportion of salt in a solution, typically measured in g/l, or parts per thousand (ppt). Seawater is typically around 335 ppt.

Scour
Local removal of soil, sediment, or other channel material from a streambed by flowing water. .

Sediment
Fragmented material that originated from weathering rocks and decomposing organic material that is transported by, suspended in, and eventually deposited in the streambed.

Sedimentation
Occurs when sediment particles that have been suspended within flowing water are deposited on the stream bottom or floodplain.

Sheetflow
A flow process associated with broad, shallow water movement on sloping ground surfaces that is not channelized or concentrated.

SJRWI
St. Joseph River Watershed Initiative

Sludge
Semisolid material such as the type precipitated by sewage treatment. Mud, mire, or ooze covering the ground or forming a deposit, as on a riverbed.

Source Water
The point at which water springs into being or from which it derives or is obtained. The point of origin, such as a spring, of a stream or river.

Spring
A point where ground water emerges (or seeps out) onto the surface of the ground, often forming the beginning of a stream.

Stormwater
Runoff water that results from a storm (usually rainfall) event.

Stream
Includes all rivers, creeks, brooks, tributaries and other flowing surface waters within a natural channel. More specifically, a perennial, intermittent, or ephemeral watercourse having a defined channel (excluding man-made ditches) which contains flow from surface and/or ground water sources during at least a portion of an average rainfall year. .

Stream Discharge
Quantity of stream flow per unit of time, generally expressed as cubic feet per second (CFS).

Stream Order
A numerical system (ranking from headwaters to river terminus) used to designate the relative position of a stream or stream segment in a drainage basin.

Streambank
The portion of the channel cross-section that restricts lateral movement of water at normal water levels.

Surface Water
Water that is on Earth’s surface, such as in a stream, river, lake, or reservoir. A natural or artificial pond or lake used for the storage and regulation of water. .

Suspension
The state in which the particles of a substance are mixed with a liquid but are not dissolved.

Swale
A depression or wide shallow ditch used to temporarily store, route, infiltrate, filter, or convey runoff.

SWAT
Soil & Water Assessment Tool

SWCD
Soil and Water Conservation District

SWPI
Source Water Protection Initiative

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T

TDS
Total dissolved solids

TMDL
Total maximum daily load

Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL)
A regulatory process that determines the volume or quantity of a given pollutant, calculated by watershed computer modeling, that can be assimilated by a receiving stream or water body on an average daily basis while maintaining the state designated water quality standard and designated use of the water body. Where existing pollutant loads to the receiving water body are in excess of the calculated TMDL, the responsibility for reducing the excess pollutant loads is allocated among existing sources of the pollutant to achieve the reductions necessary to re-attain the designated use of the water body.

TSS
Total suspended solids

Turbidity
Murkiness or cloudiness of water, indicating the presence of suspended sediments, dissolved solids, natural or man-made chemicals, algae, etc.

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U

USDA
U.S. Department of Agriculture

USEPA
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

USGS
U.S. Geological Survey

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W

Water Budget
An accounting of the movement of water through the components of the hydrologic cycle in a watershed, including precipitation, evapo-transpiration, surface runoff, ground water recharge, and ground water discharge to stream baseflow.

Water Quality
A state of water represented by a combination of productivity, chemistry, cleanliness and recreational potential. .

Water Table
The upper-most level of saturation of pore space or fractures by subsurface water in an aquifer.

Water Treatment
Systematic purification of water for human consumption.

Watershed
The land area that drains water into a particular stream, river or lake. It is a land feature that can be identified by tracing a line along the highest elevations between two areas on a map, often a ridge. Large watersheds, like the Mississippi River basin, contain thousands of smaller watersheds.

Watershed Management
Coordinated assessment and characterization of watershed conditions, and planning and implementation of strategies, approaches, tools, and techniques to protect and enhance the quality and quantity of water resources while achieving desired land and water uses.

Wetlands
Low-lying areas inundated or saturated by water at a frequency and duration sufficient to support wetland vegetation (e.g. wetlands include such areas as swamps, marshes and wet meadows). Wetlands remove pollutants through a series of chemical, physical and biological mechanisms.

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Z

Zoning
The practice of dividing land into regions or parcels pertaining to its use or activities within it.

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Sources

Watersheds, An Integrated Water Resources Plan for Chester County, Pennsylvania and Its Watersheds, September 2002

Healthy Water, Healthy People, Water Quality Educators Guide, The Watercourse, 2003

Volunteer Stream Monitoring Training Manual, Hoosier Riverwatch, Spring 2005

Materials for Loan

Water Sampling Loaner Kits
Kits are available for loan to anyone who has taken the Certified Hoosier Riverwatch Volunteer Stream Monitoring class offered by Hoosier Riverwatch. Some materials included in the kit are:

If you are interested in reserving a Water Sampling Loaner Kit, please contact the St. Joseph River Watershed Initiative at 260-484-5848 x3.


Request a Speaker
The staff or board members are available to speak to your group or organization on water quality or land use issues. If you would like someone to come to your next meeting, contact us at 260-484-5848 x3.


Videos

After the Storm           VHS  |  22 minutes
All across America, people live, work and play in watersheds without knowing it. As this video shows, protecting the nations; water resources will take the awareness and effort of individual citizens. Three case studies focus on the interconnections between water supply, water quality and the economic vitality and quality of life in communities. Co-produced by the EPA and The Weather Channel.

Fate of a River: Revisited           VHS  |  30 minutes
In 1965, the Junior League of Toledo produced a film entitled: Fate of a River: Apathy or Action depicting foaming detergents, raw sewage, green and blue industrial discharges, gasping fish and algae-laden streams in the Maumee River Watershed. This update, produced in 2002, explores the many water quality improvements made in the 30 years since the passage of the Clean Water Act in 1972 and demonstrates the need for continued actions by many of the 1.7 million people living in the three-state watershed.

Green Sells           DVD
Green Sells is a video on the reasoning behind construction Best Management Practices (BMPs) that focuses on the cost-benefits of compliance and project management.

A Watershed Mentality           DVD
A documentary about the problems of sediment and erosion in the Maumee River Basin.  The Maumee River is the largest tributary and watershed in the Great Lakes and deposits millions of cubic yards of sediment into Lake Erie yearly.  Sediment and contaminants from various non-point source pollutants lead to water quality issues such as algal booms; expensive dredging; loss of habitat and added treatment of drinking water. This project was undertaken by the Fort Wayne City Utilities, the Allen County (IN) Partnership for Water Quality, and WFWA PBS 39 Fort Wayne.


Books

Pond Life
by George K. Reid

A guide to common plants and animals of North American ponds and lakes This guide describes and illustrates the plants and animals that live in or near ponds, lakes, streams and wetlands. It includes surface-dwelling creatures as well as those of open water, the bottom, and the shore and tells how various animals and plants live together in a community.

Guide to Stream Quality Monitoring a volunteer action project
by The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) and the Division of Natural Areas and Preserves

This guide provides information on macroinvertebrates, data, volunteers, water monitoring, maintaining quality data along with macroinvertebrate identification cards.

Save Our Streams – Monitor’s Guide to Aquatic Macroinvertebrates
by Loren Larkin Kellogg

A publication of the Izaak Walton League of America

A Guide to Organizing a River Cleanup Event
by Tom’s of Maine

Field Manual for Global Low-Cost Water Quality Monitoring
by William B. Stapp and Mark K. Mitchell

This book provides a global perspective for watershed education. It includes activities to help readers understand key concepts and build skills. It provides handouts and instructions for making inexpensive equipment.

A Guide to Common Freshwater Invertebrates of North America
by J. Reese Voshell, Jr.

This book meets the needs of naturalists, environmentalists, anglers, teachers, students, and others by providing substantive information in easy-to-understand, nontechnical language for many groups of invertebrates commonly found in the streams, lakes, ponds and other freshwater environments of North America. This book will appeal to both novices and those with more advanced knowledge of the subject. It also contains more than 100 color illustrations.

Healthy Water, Healthy People Water Quality Educators Guide
by The Watercourse, International Project WET

The purpose of this publication is to raise educator’s awareness and understanding of water quality topics and issues by demonstrating the relationship of water quality to personal, public, and environmental health. This publication-especially when used in combination with the other Healthy Water, Healthy People materials-gives teachers, students, nonformal educators, water managers, treatment plant operators, and citizens an opportunity to explore water quality topics in an interactive, easy-to-use, hands-on format.

Aquatic Entomology The Fishermen’s and Ecologists’ Illustrated Guide to Insects and Their Relatives
by W. Patrick McCafferty
An up-to-date, easy-to-use introduction to the world of insects associated with aquatic environments. This book is the first consistent and thoroughly comparative treatment of each of the orders and families of aquatic and semiaquatic insects in North America, north of Mexico.

 

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