Iowa DNR
Iowa DNR
ADBNet
Water Quality Assessments
Impaired Waters List

Bear Creek IA 01-UIA-251

mouth (S1 T99N R6W Allamakee Co.) to confluence with N. Bear Cr. in S25 T100N R7W Winneshiek Co.

Assessment Cycle
2008
Result Period
2004 - 2006
Designations
Class A1 Class B(WW-1) Class HH
Assessment Methodology
Assessment Type
Monitored
Integrated Report
Category 5p
Legacy ADBCode
IA 01-UIA-0170_1
Overall Use Support
Not supporting
Aquatic Life Use Support
Not assessed
Fish Consumption
Not assessed
Primary Contact Recreation
Not supporting
Documentation
Assessment Comments

Assessment is based on results of monitoring for indicator bacteria conducted at Site 25 of the Upper Iowa River Watershed (UIRW) project from April 2004 through October 2006.

Basis for Assessment

[Note:  Prior to the current (2008) Section 305(b) cycle, this stream segment was designated only for Class B(WW) aquatic life uses.   Due to changes in Iowa’s surface water classification that were approved by U.S.  EPA in February 2008 (see http://www.iowadnr.com/water/standards/files/06mar_swc.pdf), this segment is also now presumptively designated for Class A1 (primary contact recreation) uses.   This segment remains designated for warmwater aquatic life use (now termed Class B(WW1) uses), and for fish consumption uses (now termed Class HH (human health/fish consumption uses).]

SUMMARY:  The presumptive Class A1 (primary contact recreation) uses are assessed (monitored) as “not supported” due to levels of indicator bacteria that exceed state water quality criteria.   The Class B(WW1) aquatic life uses remain “not assessed” due to the lack of water quality information upon which to base an assessment.   Fish consumption uses remain “not assessed” due to the lack of fish contaminant monitoring in this assessment segment.   The source of data for this assessment is the results of monitoring for indicator bacteria conducted at Site 25 of the Upper Iowa River Watershed (UIRW) project from April 2004 through October 2006.

EXPLANATION:  The presumptive Class A1 (primary contact recreation) uses were assessed (monitored) as “not supported” due to violations of Iowa’s water quality criteria for indicator bacteria.   Due to recent changes in Iowa’s Water Quality Standards, Iowa’s assessment methodology for indicator bacteria has changed.   Prior to 2003, the Iowa WQ Standards contained a high-flow exemption for the Class A1 criterion for indicator bacteria (fecal coliforms) designed to protect primary contact recreation uses:  the water quality criterion for fecal coliform bacteria (200 orgs/100 ml) did not apply "when the waters [were] materially affected by surface runoff."  Due to a change in the Standards in July 2003, E.  coli is now the indicator bacterium, and the high flow exemption was eliminated and replaced with language stating that the Class A criteria for E.  coli apply when Class A1, A2, or A3 uses “can reasonably be expected to occur.”  Because the IDNR Technical Advisory Committee on WQ Standards could not agree on what flow conditions would define periods when uses would not be reasonably expected to occur, all monitoring data generated for E.  coli during the assessment period, regardless of flow conditions during sample collection, will be considered for determining support of Class A uses for purposes of Section 305(b) assessments and Section 303(d) listings.  

The geometric mean of E.  coli in the 21 samples collected at UIRW Site 25 during the recreational seasons of 2004 through 2006 was 189 orgs/100 ml.   This geometric mean exceeds the Class A1 criterion of 126 orgs/100 ml.   Eleven of the 21 samples (52%) exceeded Iowa’s Class A1 single-sample maximum criterion of 235 orgs/100 ml.   According to U.S.  EPA guidelines for Section 305(b) reporting and IDNR’s assessment/listing methodology, if the geometric mean of E.  coli is greater than the applicable state criterion, the primary contact recreation uses should be assessed as "not supported" (see pgs 3-33 to 3-35of U.S.  EPA 1997b).  

The Class B(WW1) warmwater aquatic life uses and the fish consumption uses remain “not assessed” due to the lack of water quality information upon which to base an assessment.

Monitoring and Methods
Assessment Key Dates
10/3/2006 Fixed Monitoring End Date
4/27/2004 Fixed Monitoring Start Date
Methods
420 Water column surveys (e.g. fecal coliform)
Monitoring Levels
Biological 0
Habitat 0
Physical Chemistry 0
Toxic 0
Pathogen Indicators 3
Other Health Indicators 0
Other Aquatic Life Indicators 0
# of Bio Sites 0
BioIntegrity N/A
Causes and Sources of Impairment
Causes Use Support Cause Magnitude Sources Source Magnitude
Pathogens Primary Contact Recreation High
  • Source Unknown
  • High