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Main Title Agricultural runoff and reservoir drawdown effects on a 2760-hectare reservoir /
Author Shaw, Byron H. ; Powers, Charles F.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Powers, Charles F.
CORP Author Wisconsin Univ.-Stevens Point. Coll. of Natural Resources.;Corvallis Environmental Research Lab., OR.
Publisher U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Research Laboratory,
Year Published 1982
Report Number EPA/600/3-82/003; EPA-R-803547
Stock Number PB82-186529
Subjects Agricultural pollution--Wisconsin ; Animal waste--Wisconsin ; Fishes--Effect of water pollution on--Wisconsin ; Reservoirs--Wisconsin
Additional Subjects Runoff ; Water pollution control ; Big Eau Pleine Reservoir ; Farms ; Agricultural wastes ; Phosphorus ; Nutrients ; Drawdown ; Land use ; Snowmelt ; Algae ; Plankton blooms ; Soil erosion ; Summer ; Winter ; Losses ; Mathematical models ; Tables(Data) ; Wisconsin ; Reservoir operation ; Marathon County(Wisconsin) ; Fish kills ; Organic loading ; Agricultural watersheds ; Manure
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
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Status
NTIS  PB82-186529 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 56 pages : illustrations ; 28 cm
Abstract
The 2760-hectare Big Eau Pleine Reservoir in Marathon County, Wisconsin has experienced frequent winter fish kills and summer algae blooms since its construction in 1937. A study of the reservoir and its 945 square kilometer watershed was conducted from 1974 to 1979 in an attempt to quantify the sources of water quality problems to recommend management practices to reduce these problems. Land use and nutrient loading studies in the watershed identified agricultural runoff, especially animal waste, as the major source of nutrient loading. Total phosphorus loss from the watershed averaged 0.59 kg/ha/yr for the 4-year period; approximately 60 percent occurred during the spring snowmelt and runoff season. Hydrologic and soil erosion modeling indicated that spring snowmelt was the period of greatest runoff and soil erosion and that much of the soil erosion and runoff originates on the lower slopes and alluvial soils.
Notes
Caption title. "March 1982." "EPA-600/3-82-003." Microfiche.