Responding to emergencies

Cleaning an oil spill
 Monitoring can be used to assess the effects of environmental catastrophes such as spills, floods, or droughts. Data may be required to give adequate definition to the water quality problem and the magnitude of the impacts. For example, monitoring during and after the cleanup of an oil spill can help determine the extent of exposure, when a resource is safe for fishing or drinking, or whether and where cleanup efforts need to continue.

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Common Monitoring Objectives

Water Quality Monitoring Objectives

To properly manage a water resource, you need to know all about the water body and the watershed it drains. Watershed monitoring is a major part of the process for collecting this information and is therefore an essential component to water quality assessment and to watershed management. The information collected can support sound decision-making by identifying high quality waters and tracking their condition over time, by providing clues to the sources and levels of pollution for waters that are impaired or threatened, by helping managers understand the impacts of human activities within the watershed, and by providing input data used in water quality models. So without crucial monitoring data, we might not know exactly where a pollution problem exists, where we need to focus our watershed management energies, or where we may have made progress. Water quality monitoring programs are designed to serve many purposes.

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Section 4 of 19