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Monitoring Water Quality

Chapter 3
Watershed Survey Methods


3.1 - How to Conduct a Watershed Survey
3.2 - The Visual Assessment


One of the most rewarding and least costly stream monitoring activities a volunteer program can conduct is the watershed survey. Some programs call it a windshield survey, a visual survey, or a watershed inventory. It is, in essence, a comprehensive survey of the geography, land and water uses, potential and actual pollution sources, and history of the stream and its watershed.

The watershed survey may be divided into two distinct parts:

The watershed survey requires little in the way of training or equipment. Its chief uses include: To actually determine whether those stressors are, in fact, affecting the stream requires additional monitoring of chemical, physical, or biological conditions.

The watershed survey described in this chapter was developed from survey approaches used by programs such as Rhode Island Watershed Watch, Maryland Save Our Streams, the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, and Washington's AdoptA Stream Foundation. References are provided at the end of this chapter for further information on watershed surveys.

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