Iowa DNR
Iowa DNR
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Water Quality Assessments
Impaired Waters List

Turkey River IA 01-TRK-148

mouth (Clayton Co.) to confluence with Volga R. in S26 T92N R4W Clayton Co.

Assessment Cycle
2006
Result Period
2002 - 2004
Designations
Class B(WW)
Assessment Methodology
Assessment Type
Monitored
Integrated Report
Category 1
Legacy ADBCode
IA 01-TRK-0200_0
Overall Use Support
Fully
Aquatic Life Use Support
Fully
Fish Consumption
Fully
Documentation
Assessment Comments

Assessment is based on results of (1) U.S. EPA/IDNR fish tissue (RAFT) monitoring in 2000, (2) 2002 IDNR Fisheries data: Fish IBI = 39 (fair), and (3) 2003 REMAP data: FIBI = 75 (excellent), BMIBI = 53 (fair). FIBI BIC = 52; BMIBI BIC = 61, (3) IDNR/UHL ambient monitoring from 2002-04, (4) USGS ambient monitoring in 2004, and (5) ambient monitoring from 2000-02 by LTRMP.

Basis for Assessment

SUMMARY:  The Class B(WW) aquatic life uses are assessed (monitored) as "fully supported" based on results of (1) ambient chemical/physical water quality monitoring from 2002-04 conducted by IDNR/UHL, LTRMP, and USGS and (2) biological monitoring conducted by the IDNR Fisheries Bureau in 2002 and by IDNR/UHL in 2003.   Fish consumption uses remain assessed (monitored) as "fully supported" based on results of fish contaminant monitoring in 2000.   Sources of data for this assessment include (1) results monthly water quality monitoring from January 2002 through December 2004 at the IDNR ambient station (STORET station 10220001) located at the County Road C43 bridge south of Garber approximately 1 mile downstream from confluence with the Volga River, (2) results of water quality monitoring conducted at Garber by USGS from March to September 2004, (3) results of routine water quality monitoring conducted at station TK04.8M from 2002 through 2004 by IDNR staff of the Upper Mississippi River Long-Term Resource Monitoring Program (LTRMP) at Bellevue, IA, (4) results of U.S.  EPA/IDNR fish tissue (RAFT) monitoring in 2000 near Garber, and (5) biological monitoring conducted in 2002 by the IDNR Fisheries Bureau and conducted in 2003 by IDNR/UHL for the Iowa REMAP project.  

EXPLANATION:  The Class B(WW) aquatic life uses were assessed (monitored) as "fully supported" based on results of ambient monthly monitoring from (1) the IDNR/UHL ambient station south of Garber from 2002 through 2004 (2) the USGS station near Garber in 2004, and (3) from the LTRMP station near the mouth of the Turkey River in 2002-04.   In addition, the results of biological monitoring in 2002 and 2003 also suggest “full support” of the Class B(WW) uses.  

Monitoring at the IDNR and LTRMP stations showed no violations of Class B(WW) water quality criteria for conventional pollutants or ammonia in the 36 samples analyzed at the IDNR station and in the 43 samples analyzed at the LTRMP station.   In addition, none of the 10 sampled analyzed for common pesticides at the IDNR/UHL station violated their respective Class B(WW) criteria.   Of the ten samples analyzed for toxic metals, only one sample violated a Class B(WW) criterion:  one of the ten samples analyzed for lead exceeded the Class B(WW) criterion of 30 ug/l.   This violation occurred on July 6, 2004; the level of lead in the sample was 60 ug/l.   According to U.S.  EPA guidelines for Section 305(b) water quality assessments (U.S.  EPA 1997b, page 3-18), however, one violation of a water quality criterion for a toxic pollutant in an abundant data set (at least 10 samples over at three-year period) does not indicate an impairment of aquatic life uses.   None of the seven samples collected by USGS from March through September 2004 showed violations of Class B(WW) criteria for DO, pH, ammonia, or pesticides.

Results of biological monitoring conducted by the IDNR Fisheries Bureau in 2002 and conducted by IDNR/UHL in 2003 suggest that the Class B(WW) aquatic life uses should be assessed (evaluated) as “fully supported”.   A series of biological metrics that reflect stream water quality and habitat integrity were calculated from the biocriteria sampling data.   The biological metrics are based on the numbers and types of benthic macroinvertebrate taxa and fish species collected in the stream sampling reach.   The biological metrics were combined to make a fish community index of biotic integrity (FIBI) and a benthic macroinvertebrate index (BMIBI).   The indexes rank the biological integrity of a stream sampling reach on a rising scale from 0 (minimum) to 100 (maximum).   The 2003 REMP FIBI score was 75 (excellent) and the BMIBI score was 53 (fair).  The 2002 Fisheries FIBI was 39 (fair).   The FIBI average was 57.   The aquatic life use support was assessed (evaluated) as Fully Supporting (= FS), based on a comparison of the FIBI and BMIBI scores with biological impairment criteria (BIC) established from a statistical analysis of data collected at stream ecoregion reference sites from 1994-2004.   The FIBI BIC for this ecoregion is 52 and the BMIBI BIC for this ecoregion is 61.   This assessment is considered evaluated because the drainage area (1482 mi2) above this sampling site was greater than the maximum limit (500 mi2) that was used to calibrate the Iowa wadeable stream impairment criteria.   Even though this site passed both the FIBI and BMIBI BICs, it is uncertain as to whether or not this segment is meeting the aquatic life criteria because it doesn’t fall in the calibrated watershed size.

Fish consumption uses were assessed (monitored) as “fully supported” based on results of U.S.EPA/IDNR fish contaminant (RAFT) monitoring near Garber in 2000.   The composite samples of fillets from channel catfish and smallmouth bass had low levels of contaminants.   Levels of primary contaminants in the composite sample of channel catfish fillets were as follows:  chlordane: < 0.03 ppm; dieldrin:  0.0094; total PCBs:  0.195 ppm; mercury:  0.034 ppm.   Levels of primary contaminants in the composite sample of smallmouth bass fillets were as follows:  chlordane: < 0.03 ppm; total PCBs:  <0.10 ppm; mercury:  0.084 ppm.

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 the Turkey River near Garber:  the levels of contaminants do not exceed any of the new (2006) advisory trigger levels, thus indicating no justification for issuance of a consumption advisory for this waterbody.

Monitoring and Methods
Assessment Key Dates
12/7/2004 Fixed Monitoring End Date
10/3/2003 Biological Monitoring
1/2/2002 Fixed Monitoring Start Date
1/1/2002 Biological Monitoring
8/29/2000 Fish Tissue Monitoring
Methods
220 Non-fixed station physical/chemical monitoring (conventional pollutant only)
320 Benthic macroinvertebrate surveys
380 Quan. measurements of instream parms-- channel morphology-- floodplain-- 1-2 seasons-- by prof
260 Fish tissue analysis
230 Fixed station physical/chemical (conventional plus toxic pollutants)
315 Regional reference site approach
330 Fish surveys
Monitoring Levels
Biological 4
Habitat 4
Physical Chemistry 1
Toxic 0
Pathogen Indicators 0
Other Health Indicators 0
Other Aquatic Life Indicators 0
# of Bio Sites 2
BioIntegrity Fair