nutrient criteria development for new hampshire’s estuaries

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Nutrient Criteria Development for New Hampshire’s Estuaries P. Trowbridge, P.E. December 7, 2007

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Nutrient Criteria Development for New Hampshire’s Estuaries. P. Trowbridge, P.E. December 7, 2007. Topics to Cover. Guiding questions and nitrogen loading rates for Great Bay compared to other estuaries Estuarine nutrient criteria in other states - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Nutrient Criteria Development for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

P. Trowbridge, P.E.

December 7, 2007

Page 2: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Topics to Cover

• Guiding questions and nitrogen loading rates for Great Bay compared to other estuaries

• Estuarine nutrient criteria in other states

• Deadline for establishing nutrient criteria for NH’s estuaries

• Develop group consensus on how to proceed in order to meet the deadline

Page 3: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Guiding Questions (from Jim Hagy, EPA)

• Q. Has the system degraded from a prior state? Why?

• Q. Is the estuary degraded relative to other estuaries?

• Q. Are there environmental measures or indicators associated with nutrient over enrichment?

• Q. Are nutrient loads significantly above natural levels?

Page 4: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Eelgrass in 2005

Eelgrass in 1949-1981

Rivers

Great Bay Estuary

NH Towns

ME Towns2 0 2 4 Miles

N

New Hampshire Maine

Eelgrass Cover in theGreat Bay EstuaryEelgrass Cover in theGreat Bay Estuary

Eelgrass Cover (ac)

1949-81: 3,222

2005: 2,291

Percent Change:

-29%

Page 5: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Water Quality in GBE relative to Similar New England

Estuaries

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14

Casco et al

Great Bay (AP)

Narragansett

umol N/L or ug chla/L

Chla

NO23

Page 6: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Environmental Indicators of Nutrient Enrichment

• Eelgrass distribution and biomass • Nitrogen concentrations in water• Water clarity• Watershed nitrogen loading• Watershed sediment loading

??

??

??

Page 7: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Nitrogen Loading Rates in Great Bay Compared to Other

Systems• Hauxwell et al. 2003

Eelgrass disappears at >60 kg/ha/yr

• Latimer et al. 2007 At 160 mg/m3, less than 5% of eelgrass remains

• Nixon et al. 2001 Compiled loadings of eelgrass and macroalgae systems

• Great Bay loading rate is 182 kg/ha/yr

• Great Bay loading rate is 280 mg/m3 (normalized by RT)

• Great Bay loads were at high end of eelgrass-dominated systems

Normalized by Surface Area

Normalized by Volume & Residence Time

Page 8: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Nitrogen Loading Rates in Great Bay Compared to Other

Systems

• Steward & Green 2007 watershed loads to maintain eelgrass 2.4-3.2 kg/ha/yr

• Great Bay watershed loading rate 3.8 kg/ha/yr

Normalized by watershed area

Page 9: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Watershed Nitrogen Yields for Estuaries Similar to the GBE

0 5 10 15 20

Passamaquoddy

Englishmans

Blue Hill

Casco

Great Bay

Buzzards

Narragansett

Watershed N Yield (kg N/ha/yr)

Page 10: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Relationship of Water Quality to Watershed Nitrogen Yields

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

0 5 10 15 20

Watershed N Yield (kg N/ha/yr)

ug

ch

la/L

or

um

ol

N/L

Chla

NO23

Casco Bay et al

Great Bay

Narragansett Bay

Page 11: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Guiding Questions

• Q. Has the system degraded from a prior state? Why? YES, eelgrass loss.

• Q. Is the estuary degraded relative to other estuaries? YES, compared to Casco et al.

• Q. Are there environmental measures or indicators associated with nutrient over enrichment? YES, eelgrass, [TN], N loads.

• Q. Are nutrient loads significantly above natural levels? YES, compared to Casco et al. and when normalized by estuarine area or volume.

Page 12: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Numeric Criteria Status for States

Stage NumApproved criteria for N & P, or casual and response parameters

6 HI AS GU CN MD* DE*

Approved criteria for N, P, or response parameter

4 VI* VA* CT* NY*

Approved criteria for N & P, or casual and response parameters for some waters

0

Approved criteria for N, P, or response parameter for some waters

0

NH CA MS NJ LA AL

Just starting criteria process 5 ME DE MA RI AK

Large Class of EstuariesStates

Calculating criteria for all parameters and waters

0

Note: Some states are listed twice because they have adopted criteria for some waters and are working on developing criteria for the remaining waters.

Notes: DE*, MD* as part of Chesapeake Bay criteria; NY*, CT* dissolved oxygen criteria in LIS; VI* phosphorus criteria; VA* DO, water clarity, and chlorophyll criteria

Collecting data for all parameters or waters

6

21 of 27

ALL Estuaries

Some Estuaries

Existing nutrient

criteria are all based on response variables

paired with watershed

loading

Slide courtesy of Jacques Oliver, EPA

Page 13: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Rationale for 12/31/08 Deadline

for a Recommendation• Process began three years ago. Competing

priorities for NHEP staff in 2009.• Municipalities need clear direction for

WWTF upgrades and NPDES permits.• Losing eelgrass biomass at ~100 tons/yr.• Implementation will be slow.• 2009 SOE conference will be a good

opportunity to disseminate the results.• NHEP Management Plan will be updated in

2010: Add nitrogen reduction action plans.

Page 14: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Options for the Next Year (see handout)

• Option 1: Develop a long-term trend of nitrogen and sediment loads to the estuary and compare to historic eelgrass distribution

• Option 2: Develop different nutrient criteria for different segments of the estuary

• Option 3: Designate the Great Bay Estuary as a Tier I waterbody for nitrogen and sediment

Page 15: Nutrient Criteria Development  for New Hampshire’s Estuaries

Options (cont.)

• Option 4: Reference concentration approach within Great Bay

• Option 5: Reference approach for other estuaries in the ecoregion