Riverton IA 05-NSH-1413
Fremont County S19T68NR41W 1 mi. NW of Riverton.
Assessment Comments
Assessment based on reports by IDNR Wildlife Bureau.
Basis for Assessment
[NOTE: This wetland is not in the current (September 2001) version of the Iowa Water Quality Standards and is thus classified only for "general uses." This wetland however, has been proposed for inclusion to the standards as a Class B(LW) waterbody. For the 2002 report, the waterbody identification number for this wetland was changed from "IA-WETLAND-21" to "IA 05-NSH-0015-L."]
SUMMARY: The aquatic life uses are assessed (evaluated) as "fully supporting / threatened." Fish consumption uses remain "not assessed." EXPLANATION: The aquatic life uses are assessed as "fully supporting / threatened." The upgrade in support of the aquatic life uses from "partially supporting" (see assessments for the 1998 and 2000 reports above) to "fully supported / threatened" is based on the following information from the Iowa DNR Wildlife Bureau. According to the local DNR Wildlife Biologist (Priebe), Riverton normally has very good water quality but can receive considerable sedimentaion from extremely heavy local rains. This wetland can also be inundated from high river flows in the East Nishnabotna and/or West Nishnabotna rivers when extremely heavy rains occur higher in their watersheds. Based on this information, the previous identification of "siltation" as impairing the aquatic life uses of this wetland was potentially in error. Thus, the level of support of the aquatic life uses is upgraded from "partially supported" to "fully supporting / threatened." The assessment category for this wetland is "evaluated." In terms of Section 305(b) reporting, "monitored assessments" are based primarily on recent, site-specific ambient monitoring data and thus have relatively high confidence. "Evaluated assessments" are those based on data older than five years or other than site-specific ambient monitoring data (e.g., desktop models or questionnaire surveys of fish and game biologists [=best professional judgement]) and thus have relatively lower confidence. Fish consumption uses remain "not assessed." In general, Iowa wetlands are not managed for recreational fisheries; thus, fish contaminant monitoring is not typically conducted at these waterbodies.
Assessment Key Dates
Methods
| 120 | Surveys of fish and game biologists/other professionals |
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 |
| Causes | Use Support | Cause Magnitude | Sources | Source Magnitude |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Siltation | Overall Use Support | Not Impairing |
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| Siltation | Aquatic Life Support | Not Impairing |
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