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Lake
Oswego, Oregon Storm Water Runoff
The Challenge
Municipal water quality managers recognize the need for data that can
be used to monitor and assess the impact of urbanization to the condition
of natural watersheds. Storm events in conjunction with the alteration
of native landscape, the building of roads, and overuse of fertilizer
can contribute excess nutrients, sediment, and other pollutants to environmentally-important
watersheds. Such pollutants often make their way downstream through natural
watersheds and detrimentally impact the water quality of fresh water bodies.
For the City of Lake Oswego, Oregon, quantifying the effects of watershed
urbanization upon Oswego Lake an important local fresh water reservoir
is instrumental for proving the future success of up-stream pollution
prevention programs.
The major challenge for Lake Oswego was planning compact and unobtrusive
water quality monitoring stations that leave a small footprint and have
low impact to the surrounding natural environment. In addition, delivering
data in a repeatable, low-cost way was deemed necessary for the long-term
success of the monitoring program.
The Solution
David Gilbey, the City of Lake Oswego's Water Quality Program Coordinator,
chose two local tributaries as initial sites for a Stream Discharge Gauging
Network for the City's Supplemental Environmental Program. In part, this
program is designed to characterize the effect of storm water runoff through
two specific watersheds. The two tributaries chosen were Springbrook Creek
and Lost Dog Creek, which most influence Oswego Lake.
Hach
Environmental, headquartered in Loveland, Colorado, supplied the instruments
for both water quality stations. Station instrumentation consisted of
a Hydrolab MS5 Multi-Parameter Water Quality Instrument, an OTT CBS Compact
Bubble Sensor (level meter), and an OTT LogoSens2 Station Manager (SDI-12
Logger). Each station measures and records pH, temperature, dissolved
oxygen, specific conductance, turbidity, and water level.
Recorded data is regularly accessed from a local City of Lake Oswego
office via a cellular-based Internet connection that connects the water
quality stations to a PC. This setup not only provides instant access
to real-time water quality data but also greatly eliminates the costs
of routine travel to remote sites for data collection. Solar panels were
installed to provide convenient year-round power without the addition
of AC power.
The Result
Springbrook and Lost Dog Creeks are now being monitored continuously to
better quantify any potential watershed impacts. Data collected from these
sites can be used in near real time to calculate pollutant loading and
review potential illicit discharges from upstream. Lessons learned from
the implementation and monitoring of these sites will aid in the improvement
of data gathering and expansion of the area's pollution prevention program.
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