Surface water quality, tree cover get bad grades from conservation authority - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:58 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Windsor

Surface water quality, tree cover get bad grades from conservation authority

The Essex Region Conservation Authority (ERCA) released its report cards for the watersheds in the region, and while some results are positive, ERCA concluded some areasneed improvement.

Runoff from fields is getting into surface water

The Detroit River is nearly ice free due to a mild winter.
Waterways in the Windsor region of southwestern Ontario were part of the focus for the Essex Region Conservation Authority's report. (Dale Molnar/CBC)

The Essex Region Conservation Authority (ERCA) released its report cards for the watersheds in the region, and while some results are positive, ERCA concluded some areasneed improvement.

The report cards, which are given based on five years of data collection, are given out by conservation authorities across Ontariousing standardized methodologiesto grade surface water and groundwater quality and forest cover, according to Katie Stammler, a water quality scientist with ERCA.

Stammler said ERCA looks for substances in water that would indicate human influence: fluoride, E. coli and phosphorus.

Ground water scored well, in large part because of natural protection in the soil.

A lot of our focus on that has been onrunoff from agricultural fields.- Katie Stammler, Essex Region Conservation Authority

"We have a really heavy clay soil that sits on top of the ground water aquifers and that protects ground water from any pollutants," she said.

"So we ended upwith the scores of A with our groundwater."

Surface water issues

Things weren't as positive for surface water, where scores were between a grade of C and F, due to high levels of phosphorus and E. coli.

Leaky septic tanks are adding to high levels ofE. coli going into the tributaries in the region, and runoff from farm fields, greenhouses and residential fertilizer use is adding to high levels of phosphorus and nitrates in surface water.

"A lot of our focus on that has been onrunoff from agricultural fields and our strategies using fertilizer at the right time, place, source, rate."

That runoff, Stammler said, isn't generated by a few careless individuals but the fact that there is so much agricultural land in the region.

She said that's why part of ERCA's strategy is to try to optimize fertilizer use.

Mike McKay, executive director for the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, says nitrates in the water can create algae blooms.
Mike McKay, executive director for the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, says nitrates in the water can create algae blooms. (Dale Molnar/CBC)

"The one key thing that we try to look at with any sort of fertilizer application, and I think it's really important for us as individuals as well.Is this the right time to use it? Is this the right place?"

She said making sure not to put fertilizer down just before it rains and using good cover crops in the winter help hold the soil together and prevent massive runoff events.

"There's been lots ofreasons why there was hesitation to use cover crops here becausethe heavy place soil dries out so slowly in the spring and it creates other risks for planting in the spring," she said.

Another focus is finding out why what are supposed to be closed-loop systems, like greenhouses, are leaking into the environment.

A tree with rust colour leaves
The tree canopy in the area didn't get good grades. (Mike Evans/CBC)

"Somehow thenutrient water is getting into our environment, sowe need to work with that sector to figure out how that's happening."

Mike McKay, executive director forthe Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, saidthe effects of runoff on the lakes dependon the weather.

"It really depends on how wet of a spring we have.We can look at,you know, the months March through June roughly to see how much of runoff we have from our watershed into the lakes," he said.

"If we have a dry spring, the blooms usually aren't too bad in the summer because we don't have as much of an input of nutrients. Wet spring, we have a lot more loading of nutrients from the watershed into the lakes."

Tree cover

ERCA also gave the region bad grades for tree cover, though Stammler said to achieve a grade of C would require 15 per cent tree cover, and that "is just simply not achievable in this area," because of development.

She pointed to efforts made to increase tree cover ERCA planted 408,000 trees in the last five years and restored 2,833 hectares to forest cover.

Increasing tree cover is important because it helps create shade something that's becoming more and more important as temperatures become more extreme in summer and it helps hold soil in place.

Not only does that prevent substantial erosion, but acts as a natural barrier to some of the substances getting into waterways from fields and urban centres.