Small-stream buffers critical to health of ecosystems

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Op-ed: Small-stream buffers critical

The Georgia General Assembly is considering a bill that will
greatly affect the health of streams across Georgia. Senate
Bill 460, a bill dealing with the piping of streams and stream
buffer variances, has passed the Senate and is currently being
considered in the House.

University of Georgia scientists have researched
watersheds and streams in Georgia and the Southeast for
decades. Much of this research has focused on small streams,
which
are the systems that will be affected by this legislation.

Senate Bill 460 proposes to allow piping of small streams with
less than 25 gallons per minute (gpm) average annual flow and
establishes general criteria for buffer variances. The 25 gpm
average annual flow is an arbitrary number without any
scientific basis.

While 25 gpm probably sounds like a small number, it’s not. An
average annual flow of 25 gpm translates to over 13 million
gallons per year, which could meet the water needs of over 175
people.UGA scientists are working on a study which the
legislature requested when it modified the trout stream buffer
legislation several years ago. The report from that study will
come out this summer.

Preliminary information from this research indicates:

  1. In the Blue Ridge, an average annual flow of 25 gpm is
    generated by a watershed of about 16 acres. This only applies
    to the Blue Ridge. The watershed area generating that flow is
    likely to be significantly larger in other parts of the state.
    We estimate that watersheds of 30 to 45 acres would be needed
    to generate this flow in other parts of the state. Rainfall,
    topography, soils and geology all influence the amount of area
    required to generate this flow. These streams drain significant
    areas and should not be viewed as “wet weather ditches.”
  2. In the Blue Ridge, a stream of this size would flow in
    a channel approximately six feet wide and three feet deep. This
    includes intermittent streams that would not have any flow at
    some times of the year but would fill the channel during the
    winter and also includes small streams that begin with a spring
    and flow year-round.
  3. Often organisms such as mayflies, stoneflies and caddis
    flies
    are used as indicators of good water quality and are also
    excellent food for fish. In a Blue Ridge stream with 25 gpm
    average annual flow, there were numerous individuals from five
    different species in these indicator groups while in a piped
    stream there was only one individual in these indicator groups.
    In addition the total number of insects being supplied to
    downstream ecosystems from this piped stream was only 16 percent
    of what was being supplied from the unpiped stream. These
    insects
    are a critical source of food for downstream fish and other
    aquatic organisms.
  4. We have already lost considerable mileage of small
    streams. For example, in the Upper Chattahoochee River,
    tributaries draining forest and pastures have about 2.2 miles
    of stream for every square mile of watershed. In urban and
    suburban watersheds where there has been considerable piping
    and filling, there are only about 1.5 miles of stream for every
    square mile of watershed. That means that 0.7 mile of stream
    per square mile has been lost in these watersheds. That is a
    one-third reduction in stream miles in these watersheds.
    If only a few small streams are piped in a watershed, that will
    not have dire consequences for downstream ecosystems. If,
    however, there is a general variance with no consideration of
    what has been done to other small streams in the watershed, the
    chances for widespread destruction of small streams is great,
    with significant consequences for downstream flooding, water
    supply, water quality and fisheries resources.

Decades of scientific research throughout the country have
demonstrated the services to society provided by intact small
streams. These services are eliminated when streams are
piped.

This is what we know about small streams:

  1. They improve water quality. Think of them as the first
    line of defense. Excess nutrients entering waterways enter
    small streams, which are extremely efficient at removing those
    nutrients. They are much more efficient at nutrient removal
    than are larger, deeper channels. By eliminating those small
    streams you remove protection for waters further
    downstream.
  2. They maintain water supplies. There are close
    connections between small streams and groundwater and they
    serve to recharge the shallow groundwater system. Our recent
    experiences with drought have shown water conservation to be a
    critical issue in Georgia, hence it is important to maintain
    these services of small streams.
  3. They provide natural flood control. Because they slow
    the downstream movement of water, allow infiltration through
    the channel bottom to groundwater, and have access to a
    floodplain, these small channels reduce downstream flooding. In
    watersheds where small streams have been eliminated, downstream
    flooding increases.
  4. Vegetated buffers around small streams trap sediment
    and other pollutants, slowing their rate of movement downstream
    and minimizing impact to water supplies.
  5. They maintain biological diversity because there is a
    unique assemblage of organisms living in these small
    streams.
  6. They sustain the food webs of downstream ecosystems.
    Small streams export material that serves as food for fish
    and other organisms living downstream.

The State is funding a study to look at this issue and the
results will be coming out this summer that will provide much
needed information on this issue. If the intent is to base
natural resource legislation on sound science, we need to allow
time for that scientific analysis to be completed.

(Mark Risse, Judy Meyer, David Radcliffe Liz Kramer Rhett
Jackson and William Bumback are scientists with water-related
responsibilities with the University of Georgia.)