cabalondon 06 hilary philips, wild oxfordshire
TRANSCRIPT
Totally Thames Water-Blitz
What?•1,000 water samples from a single day•All using the same test kits supplied by River Thame Conservation Trust
•Tested by FHT for Earthwatch•Calibrated against CEH lab-tested results•Mapped by Earthwatch on Fresh Water Watch site
Why?•Highlight importance of Thames River Basin to London-focused Totally Thames Festival
•Engagement opportunity for catchment groups• Impetus for other organisations to join forces•Provide data for catchment partnerships & EA to use in combination with Historic / lab data
Why?•Highlight areas which are likely to be most important for freshwater biodiversity
•Provide a focus for positive achievable action by citizen-based groups or individuals
•Focus attention on places where we can have the greatest beneficial impact – protecting what is already good. (FHT ‘Clean Water for Wildlife’)
Useful at Different Scales
How?• Wild Oxfordshire network – local and regional • Totally Thames partnership• EA – CaBA Partnerships – Riverfly Monitors - landowners• CEH – long-term Thames monitoring• River Thame Conservation Trust• EarthWatch• Freshwater Habitats Trust
CEH Thames Sampling Sites• 23 sites monitored at weekly
intervals since 2009• Water quality testing since
1997• Nitrate records available dating
from 1860’sCentral London
3 mAOD
Thames source:110 mAOD
299 mAOD
Swindon
Oxford
ReadingSlough
WFD waterbodies and Operational Catchments
Riverfly sites
Results?01/10/2015:
>46 organisations
677 data sets
1,354 test samples
new volunteers
organisation links
Green dots give us information on where we need to protect our least nutrient impacted and possibly best freshwater biodiversity sites
Orange dots give us a guide to locations where some interventions to reduce nutrient input may be able to get them low enough to have some ecological benefit.
Red dots are highly impacted and have been for a long time in the Thames (nitrate records available on the Thames from 1850’s) and would need major costly interventions on a huge scale to get low enough to see eco benefits.
Totally Thames Water - BlitzEarthWatch Analysis16/9/2015N=613
EarthWatch Analysis
CEH Laboratory comparison
NO3 y = 0.9632x, R2=0.77PO4 y = 0.9236x, R2 = 0.94
EarthWatch Analysis
Lotic v Lentic
EA - Phosphates standards and the WFD
New standards for the second cycle RBMPs Improved relationship between water quality and biology Based on river type (alkalinity & altitude) New standards for Good status: Median and (Range of concentrations)
Examples for the Thames:
EarthWatch Analysis Thames Blitz 16/9/2015 Average nitrate concentrations Streams and rivers
Relative scale
EarthWatch Analysis Thames Blitz 16/9/2015 Average phosphate concentrationsStreams and rivers
Mean valuesRelative scale
Next?• EA to map to nearest EA sampling and WFD class• Work with catchments to help interpret• Technical article • Case studies• December Conference and workshops Oxford• Repeat blitz – re-sample some sites to get core data sets• FHT & Earthwatch related projects going forward
1. People, Ponds and Water: £1.3 m HLF funded, supported by Natural England includes:
• Clean Water for Wildlife: national project assessing nutrients in streams, rivers, ponds, lakes, ditches, springs
• PondNet: a new national volunteer network for ponds (includes eDNA national survey for great crested newts)
• Thames-specific component with £80k sub-project newly funded by Thames Water Ltd (includes nutrient testing)
2. Developing catchment based water quality assessment with volunteers
• 3 year, c£150k, Earthwatch-funded project usingnutrients kits to assess ponds, streams, rivers
• Detailed rapid kit user manual due Nov 2015
Freshwater Habitats TrustCitizen-science programme
Not THE END of the 2015
Totally Thames Water-Blitz!