Description
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) uses biological monitoring and assessment as a means to determine and report the condition of the state's rivers and streams. This basic approach is to examine fish and aquatic macroinvertebrate communities and related habitat conditions at multiple sites throughout a major watershed. From these data, an Index of Biological Integrity (IBI) score can be developed, which provides a measure of overall community health. Stream and river reaches are assigned an Assessment Unit Identification (AUID) number and will be referred to as the AUID in this report. AUIDs with low IBI scores are determined to have a biological impairment. If biological impairments are found, stressors to the aquatic community must be identified. Stressor identification is a formal and rigorous process that identifies stressors causing biological impairment of aquatic ecosystems and provides a structure for organizing the scientific evidence supporting the conclusions (Cormier et al. 2000). It looks at causal factors – negative ones harming fish and insects, and positive ones leading to healthy biology. Stressors may be physical, chemical, or biological. In simpler terms, it is the process of identifying the major factors causing harm to aquatic life. Stressor identification is a key component of the major watershed restoration and protection projects being carried out under Minnesota's Clean Water Legacy Act. This report summarizes stressor identification work in the Lac qui Parle Watershed. There were 29 biological impairments in the Lac qui Parle River Watershed. The impairments in this report are organized by 12-digit Hydrologic Unit Code (HUC). There are eleven HUCs discussed in this report.
Date Issued
2020-05
Number of Pages
200
Decade
Publisher
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (St. Paul, Minnesota)
Main Topic
Publication Series
Status
HUC4
County
Format
Rights Holder
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
Rights Management
Public Domain