North Raccoon River IA 04-RAC-1123
mouth (S21 T78N R27W Dallas Co.) to confluence with Hickory Cr. in S17 T79N R27W Dallas Co.
Assessment Comments
Assessment remains based on results of U.S. EPA/IDNR fish tissue (RAFT) monitoring in 2000.
Basis for Assessment
SUMMARY: The Class A (primary contact recreation) uses and the Class B(WW) aquatic life uses were "not assessed" due to lack of recent water quality information upon which to base these assessments. Fish consumption uses remain assessed as "fully supported" based on results of U.S. EPA/IDNR fish contaminant (RAFT) monitoring in 2000. This assessment is also used for the adjacent upriver segment (IA 04-RAC-0030-2).
EXPLANATION: Routine water quality monitoring is not conducted in this river segment; thus, data upon which to base assessments of the Class A and/or Class B(WW) uses are not available.
Fish consumption uses were assessed (monitored) as “fully supported” based on results of U.S.EPA/IDNR fish contaminant (RAFT) monitoring near Adel in 2000. The composite samples of fillets from channel catfish had low levels of contaminants. The existence of, or potential for, a fish consumption advisory is the basis for Section 305(b) assessments of the degree to which Iowa’s lakes and rivers support their fish consumption uses. Prior to 2006, IDNR used action levels published by the U.S Food and Drug Administration to determine whether consumption advisories should be issued for fish caught as part of recreational fishing in Iowa. In an effort to make Iowa’s consumption more compatible with the various protocols used by adjacent states, the Iowa Department of Public Health, in cooperation with Iowa DNR, developed a risk-based advisory protocol. This protocol went into effect in January 2006 (see http://www.iowadnr.gov/fish/news/consump.html for more information on Iowa’s revised fish consumption advisory protocol). Because the revised (2006) protocol is more restrictive than the previous protocol based on FDA action levels; fish contaminant data that previously suggested “full support” may now suggest either a threat to, or impairment of, fish consumption uses. This scenario, however, does not apply to the fish contaminant data generated from the 2000 RAFT sampling conducted in this segment of the North Raccoon River: the levels of contaminants do not exceed any of the new (2006) advisory trigger levels, thus suggesting no justification for issuance of a consumption advisory for this waterbody.
Assessment Key Dates
9/8/2000 | Fish Tissue Monitoring |
Methods
260 | Fish tissue analysis |
Monitoring Levels
Biological | 0 |
Habitat | 0 |
Physical Chemistry | 0 |
Toxic | 0 |
Pathogen Indicators | 0 |
Other Health Indicators | 0 |
Other Aquatic Life Indicators | 0 |
# of Bio Sites | 0 |
BioIntegrity | N/A |