Dave Clark and Michael Kasch

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Presentation transcript:

Dave Clark and Michael Kasch The Role of Water Quality Modeling in Watershed Management for the Clark Fork and Bitterroot Rivers Missoula, Montana April 1, 2005 Dave Clark and Michael Kasch

Introduction and Overview Purpose: Nutrient Modeling for the Clark Fork and Bitterroot Rivers Modeling Projects Model Selection Model Construction QUAL2E Models SWAT Model Model Application Project Status

Approach Purpose – Clean Water Act Sponsors Supporting projects TMDL (Total Maximum Daily Load) VNRP (Voluntary Nutrient Reduction Program) Sponsors Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) Tri-State Water Quality Council (TSWQC) City of Missoula Supporting projects River and Watershed Models

Locations of Projects River Models Clark Fork River Bitterroot River Warm Springs Creek to Flathead River Bitterroot River Darby Confluence with Clark Fork River Watershed Model Headwaters of Watershed to

Models

Model Selection A model selection process was completed for the Clark Fork River with direction by TSWQC Bitterroot River model selected to correspond with modeling on the Clark Fork River Watershed model selected by DEQ Models used to…. Assimilate monitoring data Assess the river system Prediction of response to drivers

Models River Model – QUAL2E (Enhanced Stream Water Quality Model) Application funded by TSWQC & City of Missoula Watershed Model – SWAT (Soil and Water Assessment Tool) Application funded by DEQ Public Domain Software QUAL2E developed by EPA SWAT developed by USDA-ARS

Model Capabilities QUAL2E is a one-dimensional river model capable of steady flow simulations of multiple water quality parameters QUAL2E complexity is low to moderate Computer simulation time is minutes SWAT is a watershed-scale hydrologic and water-quality model developed to predict the effects of alternative land use management operations on water, sediment, and chemical yields SWAT complexity is high Computer simulation time is hours (days)

QUAL2E - SWAT Models Results from QUAL2E and SWAT may be entered into the other model Model results may indicate key areas and land uses to focus on SWAT Ability to model non-point land use reductions May be used to model development and land use conversion impacts

Model Parameters Model parameters may include: Flow Water temperature Dissolved oxygen Sediment Nutrients (phosphorus and nitrogen forms)

Hydrology and Water Quality Sources to the River Upstream Tributaries Point sources (WWTPs) Non-point sources Irrigation drains/returns Groundwater – including septic impacts Withdrawals Irrigation Canals Locations along the River Multiple water quality monitoring stations

Model Construction

Model Construction QUAL2E Grid based SWAT GIS based Flow and water quality for headwater, tributaries, point sources, reaches SWAT GIS based Topography, land use, and soils Management files irrigation and agricultural practices, urban landscapes, groundwater

QUAL2E Model Grid 1-mile segments Clark Fork River Bitterroot River 39 Reaches 250 Segments Bitterroot River 7 Reaches 84 Segments Clark Fork River, Bitterroot River

SWAT Model GIS DEM Land Use Soils

QUAL2E Model Dates June, July, August – summer months selected for Clark Fork River Model to assess water quality during critical period 1992 and 1999 – selected for Clark Fork River Model 1992 low flow condition 1999 medium-high flow condition 1998 and 2001 – selected based on data availability (Bitterroot River) 1998 low flow condition 2001 average flow condition

SWAT Model Dates September 2000 through September 2003 Incorporate 2000 fire information into GIS land use data Model 2004 and 2005 after model construction

Model Results and Refinement

Model Comparison Compare results to monitoring data to test representation (calibration, validation, verification) Check flow Check conservative parameters (water temperature, sediment) Check non-conservative parameters (dissolved oxygen nutrients) Refine model construction Adjust model coefficients

Results Clark Fork River August 1992 Total Nitrogen

Results Clark Fork River August 1992 Total Phosphorus

Results Bitterroot River August 1992 Total Nitrogen

Results Bitterroot River August 1992 Total Phosphorus

Model Application

Model Use Sensitivity Analysis Scenarios (What if’s) Investigate drivers of water quality Scenarios (What if’s) Assess potential changes to water quality Development Land use management

Examples of Model Applications and Sensitivity Analyses Model Scenarios – ONLY EXAMPLES Reduce Tributary nutrient concentrations 50% Non-point sources in watersheds Reduce Point Source nutrient concentrations 50% Set Point Source nutrient concentration to Clark Fork limits of TP = 1 mg/L and TN = 10 mg/L (about 64 to 74% TP reduction and 0 to 65% TN reduction) Wastewater treatment plant changes Increase all nutrient source concentrations 20% Continued development and land use changes

Summary

Current Status Projects are ongoing No final results Continuing to understand the watershed Local knowledge important to model refinements Point sources, WWTPs Irrigation diversions and returns

Future Contact Will McDowell, TSWQC Michael Pipp or Kyle Flynn, DEQ Michael Kasch or David Clark, HDR