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Great Miami and Loramie Creek By: Kathryn Reed, Sarah Ambach, and Xiaojing Wu Great Miami Loramie Creek By: Kathryn Reed, Xiaojing Wu, and Sarah Ambach.

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Presentation on theme: "Great Miami and Loramie Creek By: Kathryn Reed, Sarah Ambach, and Xiaojing Wu Great Miami Loramie Creek By: Kathryn Reed, Xiaojing Wu, and Sarah Ambach."— Presentation transcript:

1 Great Miami and Loramie Creek By: Kathryn Reed, Sarah Ambach, and Xiaojing Wu Great Miami Loramie Creek By: Kathryn Reed, Xiaojing Wu, and Sarah Ambach

2 Location Located in Western Ohio Mainly in Miami and Shelby Counties City of Dayton is at southern tip of watershed

3 Background info 353 miles of stream Contains Lockington Dam (habitat and flow alterations are damaging watershed) Mainly agriculture Farmers working to improve riparian zones Bonuses given to add filter strips, plant riparian zones and add fencing for cattle

4 The yellow is row crops and the bright pink are cities like Dayton, Piqua, and Troy.

5 First 2 related, both due to channelization Nutrients = fertilizer Siltation results from channelization and construction

6 Hypothesis #1 As the QHEI increases, the IBI also increases. =

7 Analysis *QHEI and IBI are directly related. *In 1982, QHEI increased and IBI didn’t *Troy may be causing runoff and point-source pollution causing IBI to stay the same as QHEI increases.

8 Conclusion Habitat quality (QHEI) such as riparian zone, substrate, and meanders greatly affect IBI. Fish need clean water, High DO, and food to survive. Great habitat will bring more fish diversity.

9 Hypothesis #2 As the percent of agricultural land use (within 90 meters of the stream) increases, the IBI decreases. = Where’s my friend Nemo?

10 Inverse relationship No significant discrepancies Agriculture (within 90 meters of the stream) adds nutrients (fertilizer) which hurt fish (IBI)

11 Conclusion Agriculture intrudes on the Riparian Zone Nutrients (fertilizer) and soil run off into the stream Causing an increase in siltation which destroys the fish habitat

12 Hypothesis number 3 As the quality of the substrate increases the IBI also increases. =

13 Place and Time Substrate is a component of the QHEI IBI and Substrate quality are directly related Siltation was a significant impairment –Causes low substrate quality

14 Conclusion IBI depends on the substrate to be clean and free of siltation If substrate is full of siltation (not clean) the IBI decreases When substrate is full of silt fish don’t have a place to lay eggs or hide from predators

15 What Can We Do To Help? Urban Stop point source pollution Slow down construction Keep streets clean of oil and gas Agriculture Plant riparian zones Keep cattle out of streams STOP channelization Suburban Stop washing Detergents into sewers Stop fertilizing lawns Slow down construction Conserve!!!

16 Acknowledgements Melanie-Our teacher that didn’t run away Paula-Our great organizer Our Parents-For letting us come Kathryn-Our leader Steve-Our Einstein / Vanna Virginie-Our French computer expert Shannon-Our wonderful web spinner Leslie-The Boss And all the rest of the staff at OSC THANK YOU!!


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