Bioassessment of Biological Criteria and Water Quality to Determine the Effects of Increasing Residential and Commercial Development Around Rock Creek
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Hood College Biology
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Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Urbanization is increasing at an alarming rate around the United States, and the
city of Frederick, Maryland and the surrounding area are no exception. This increase in
urbanization is having a severe, detrimental impact on waterways, and is becoming a
leading cause of stream degradation. This study was undertaken to discover if the
increase in urbanization around Rock Creek (Frederick County, MD) was causing
degradation of the streams' health. Seven sites along Rock Creek were sampled during
baseline and storm event conditions each season for one year to determine water quality.
Benthic macroinvetebrate sampling occurred twice during the study to determine the
effect of urbanization on the biological health of Rock Creek. Field surveys and
geographic information systems (CIS) were used to calculate the total urban land cover
and impervious surface land cover in the watershed upstream from each site.
Rock Creek is surrounded by 51.9% urban land, which translates into 20.36% of
impervious surface. Even though Rock Creek is surrounded by a high percentage of
imperviousness, it only correlated half the time with water quality, and never correlated
with benthic DM scores or Hilsenhoff Biotic Index scores. Sixteen of the 17 water quality
parameters showed a statistically significant difference between baseline and storm event
conditions. All chemical parameters (baseline and storm event), except four, correlated
to some degree with impervious surfaces with 56% of the water quality parameters
significantly correlated with impervious surfaces. However, this study failed to show a
statistically significant relationship between impervious surfaces with benthic IBI scores
and Hilsenhoff biotic index scores. Even though most of the benthic DM scores were low
(poor quality) and most of the Hilsenhoff biotic .index scores were high (poor quality),
none of the scores correlated with impervious surfaces. Statistically and biologically,
urbanization is having an impact on Rock Creek. However, although urbanization is a
key factor behind the degradation of Rock Creek it is not the only factor. More needs to
be done in order to understand why Rock Creek is in such biologically poor condition, to
fully understand the effects of impervious land cover on Rock Creek, and to find the
other sources that are causing the degradation of Rock Creek
