《美国环保署大湖区国家计划办公室的水质调查简史》

  • 来源专题:水环境管理与流域管理
  • 编译者: 王阳
  • 发布时间:2018-06-25
  • The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Great Lakes National Program Office (GLNPO) water quality survey (WQS) constitutes the longest-running, most extensive monitoring of water quality and the lower trophic level biota of the Laurentian Great Lakes, and has been instrumental in tracking shifts in nutrients and the lower food web over the past several decades. The initial impetus for regular monitoring of the Great Lakes was provided by the 1972 Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (GLWQA) which asked the parties to develop monitoring and surveillance programs to ensure compliance with the goals of the agreement. The resulting monitoring plan, eventually known as the Great Lakes International Surveillance Plan (GLISP), envisioned a nine-year rotation of intensive surveys of the five lakes. A broadening of the scope of the GLWQA in 1978 and the completion of the first nine-year cycle of sampling, prompted reappraisals of the GLISP. During this pause, and using knowledge gained from GLISP, GLNPO initiated an annual WQS with the narrower focus of tracking water quality changes and plankton communities in the offshore waters of the lakes. Beginning in 1983 with lakes Erie, Huron, and Michigan, the WQS added Lake Ontario in 1986 and Lake Superior in 1992, evolving into its current form in which all five lakes are sampled twice a year. The WQS is unique in that all five lakes are sampled by one agency, using one vessel and one principal laboratory for each parameter group, and represents an invaluable resource for managing and understanding the Great Lakes.

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  • 《美国环保局五大湖国家计划办公室对劳伦琴大湖区的监测:来自40年数据收集的洞察力》

    • 来源专题:水环境管理与流域管理
    • 编译者:王阳
    • 发布时间:2018-06-25
    • The U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office (GLNPO) implements long-term monitoring programs to assess Great Lakes ecosystem status and trends for many interrelated ecosystem components, including offshore water quality as well as offshore phytoplankton, zooplankton and benthos; chemical contaminants in air, sediments, and predator fish; hypoxia in Lake Erie's central basin; and coastal wetland health. These programs are conducted in fulfillment of Clean Water Act mandates and Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement commitments. This special issue presents findings from GLNPO's Great Lakes Biology Monitoring Program, Great Lakes Water Quality Monitoring Program, Lake Erie Dissolved Oxygen Monitoring Program, Integrated Atmospheric Deposition Network, Great Lakes Fish Monitoring and Surveillance Program, and Great Lakes Sediment Surveillance Program. These GLNPO programs have generated temporal and spatial datasets for all five Great Lakes that form the basis for assessment of the state of these lakes, including trends in nutrients, key biological indicators, and contaminants in air, sediments and fish. These datasets are used by researchers and managers across the Great Lakes basin for investigating physical, chemical and biological drivers of ongoing ecosystem changes; some of these analyses are presented in this special issue, along with discussion of new methods and approaches for monitoring.
  • 《美国环保局将主办大湖区恢复倡议计划三罗彻斯特公众参与会议》

    • 来源专题:水环境管理与流域管理
    • 编译者:王阳
    • 发布时间:2018-06-25
    • CHICAGO (June 12, 2018) – U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will host the second of six informal public engagement sessions on the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Action Plan III next week in Rochester, N.Y. The session will run from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday, June 21, at the Roger Robach Community Center, 180 Beach Ave. At the June 21 engagement session, members of the public will be able to learn more about the GLRI Action Plan development process, talk with representatives from EPA and other agencies, and provide input on priorities to be used in the initial stage of developing a GLRI Action Plan covering fiscal years 2020 through 2024. Meetings in Duluth, Minn.; Milwaukee, Wis.; Saginaw, Mich.; and Chicago, Ill., will follow later this summer. Background EPA and its federal partners are currently developing Action Plan III, which will outline GLRI priorities and goals for 2020-2024. Its focus will be on: Toxic substances and areas of concern; Invasive species; Nonpoint source pollution impacts on nearshore health; Habitat and species; and Future actions The proposed plan is expected to be available for formal public comment this fall. For more information on GLRI and Action Plan III, visit: https://www.glri.us/