Document Details

The Development of Nutrient Criteria for Ecoregions within: California, Arizona, and Nevada

Tetra Tech, Inc. (Tetra Tech) | January 1st, 2002


Development of regional nutrient criteria is one component of a larger strategy to address water quality problems associated with nutrient over-enrichment and culturally-induced accelerated rates of eutrophication of waterbodies in the U.S. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Department of Agriculture have several active program initiatives to address the nutrient overenrichment problem. These programs address point and nonpoint sources of pollution, evaluate public health impacts from animal feeding operations, conduct research and monitoring to provide data and assessment techniques to better characterize the problem, and have offer nutrient management policies to provide practical support to agricultural operations to reduce the export of nutrients from their lands. The purpose of the regional nutrient criteria development process is to provide numeric targets for the various nutrient management programs that are regionally appropriate by reflecting geographic variations of waterbody response to nutrients.

The current nutrient criteria development process for California and EPA Region IX (California, Nevada, Arizona, and Hawaii) started with the publication of the National Strategy for the Development of Regional Nutrient Criteria (EPA 1998) in June 1998.

Keywords

monitoring, nutrients, water quality