Iowa DNR
Iowa DNR
ADBNet
Water Quality Assessments
Impaired Waters List

Unnamed Tributary to Silver Creek IA 01-UIA-6569

from mouth (T99N R11W Sec13) to headwaters (T99N R11W Sec23) Howard Co.

Cycle
2024
Release Status
Final
Overall IR
5 - Water is impaired or threatened and a TMDL is needed.
Trend
Unknown
Created
11/1/2023 8:14:01 AM
Updated
12/20/2023 11:17:56 AM
Use Support
Class A1
Recreation - Primary contact
Not Supported
Support Level
Not Supported
Impairment Code
5p - Impairment occurs on a waterbody with a presumptive A1 or B(WW1) use.
Cause Magnitude
Moderate
Status
Continuing
Source
Unknown: Source Unknown
Source Confidence
N/A
Cycle Added
2014
Impairment Rationale
Geometric mean criterion exceeded
Data Source
Watershed project monitoring
TMDL Priority
Tier III
Class BWW1
Aquatic Life - Warm Water Type 1
Not Assessed
Impairment Delistings
No delistings for this assessment cycle.
Documentation
Assessment Summary

The presumptive Class A1 use remains assessed as "not supported" due to levels of indicator bacteria (E. coli) that exceeded state water quality criteria. All other designated uses were “not assessed.”

Assessment Explanation

Data Sources:

Data Source

Data Source ID

Data Type

Data Age

Site ID

Site Name

Site Description

Iowa DNR

6

WQ

CY 2011-2012

15450017

Tributary to Silver Creek DS of WWTP

Site 2

Iowa DNR

6

WQ

CY 2011-2012

15450018

Tributary to Silver Creek US of WWTP

Site 1


Presumptive Class A1 - Indicator Bacteria: 2011-2012

Site ID

Data Source ID

# Samples / # Years

2011 Geometric Mean

2012 Geometric Mean

Annual Geometric Mean Violation

# Violations

% Violations

Significantly >10% Violations

Assessment Type

Support Level

15450017

6

22 / 2

272

2186

Yes

15

68%

Yes

Evaluated

Not

15450018

6

22 / 2

315

557

Yes

16

73%

Yes

Evaluated

Not


Presumptive Class BWW1 - No Data

Monitoring and Methods
Assessment Key Dates
4/18/2011
Monitoring Start
7/11/2012
Monitoring End
Methods
150
Monitoring data more than 5 years old
420
Indicator bacteria monitoring