Using Diatoms as a Water Quality Indicator
By Karla Lant
fondriest.com
Diane Winte working next to a stream in
New Jersey.
A team from the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University working with New Jersey
officials has revealed that the state’s water quality indicators — those
specific to nutrients — need some work.
But unlike some other approaches that focus on chemical analysis
or other biological indicators like the health of benthic macroinvertebrates,
this technique is focused on tiny, single-celled diatoms, a form of algae.
Dr.
Don Charles, a senior academy scientist and the principal author of a recent paper spoke to EM about
the work.
“The
New Jersey DEP came to us and said that they were interested in having metrics
that better reflected nutrient conditions in the rivers and streams in New
Jersey,” explains Dr. Charles.
“They
have to report a classification of the state’s rivers and streams to the US
EPA, and they felt that they were classifying too many of the streams as being
impaired — assigned a low ecological condition category — and once a stream got
on this list, it was hard to get it off.”
Tom
Belton of the NJDEP Office of Science, and other state officials, knew about
algae and diatoms and asked Dr. Charles and the team if they would develop
diatom-based metrics that more accurately reflected nutrient conditions.
“They
didn’t have a lot of money in the beginning, so we basically started in the
north and worked our way south through different ecoregions,”
details Dr. Charles.
“We
went through a process of going out, collecting diatom and water chemistry
samples, analyzing the diatoms and algae, and then relating species assemblages
to nutrients and coming up with a nutrient index. We finished that up around
2000.”
Many
different nutrient indices based on diatoms exist, in part because people have
been using diatoms for a long period of time, and some of the metrics can be
relatively simple — although some are much more complicated and take into
account different ecological settings.
A stream
“We
came up with a method that used inference modeling,”
Dr. Charles describes.
“Basically,
it’s a quantitative model that takes the diatom assemblage and essentially
assigns a coefficient or an indicator value to each taxon in terms of the level
of nutrients where it’s most typically found. It’s a little more complicated
than this, but you’re basically taking a count of diatoms in a new sample, and
then you multiply the number of valves you’ve found of each diatom times its
indicator value, and then sum them all up, and take the average, and
that’s your index value.”
Although
the process is not as cut and dried as taking the area of a circle, for
example, the model is reliable and predictable in most situations.
It’s
important to parse out nutrient effects and other disturbances affecting the
diatom assemblages related to things like stormwater runoff, for example.
The
team tested whether the diatoms could suss this out in New Jersey.
“The
question was, basically, is there a strong enough relationship to nutrients
that you can create an index that will help us make a determination of whether
we have a nutrient problem or not,” states Dr. Charles.
“In
particular, if we have to assign a stream reach to an impairment category,
would we be able to say the reason for the impairment was nutrients or not
nutrients.”
The
team needed to determine not just the overall average nutrient conditions in
the different streams, but also how much was too much.
“They
wanted bright lines or boundaries, so they were wondering if we could develop a
way to look at the diatoms and say this site is impaired due to nutrients or
this site is not impaired due to nutrients,” comments Dr. Charles.
“And
so that’s a difficult thing to do because it starts bringing in value judgments
and involves an element of subjectivity. They suggested that we try the
Biological Condition Gradient (BCG) approach.”
What diatoms reveal about water quality
One
of the team’s goals was to ensure they had great water quality data throughout
the process.
“I
think one of the reasons our approach has worked well is because we put a lot
of effort at the very beginning into making sure we had a good selection of sites,
good water quality data, that we spent time on the taxonomy, and documented it
so it could be applied in the future,” remarks Dr. Charles.
“We
have data on close to two hundred locations in New Jersey. The study was
designed to answer the question of how much variability is associated with
different conditions. We find that it’s pretty consistent based on time. Even
though the taxonomic mix can change, the ecological indicators you get from it
are consistent.”
One
of the advantages of using diatoms to monitor water quality is access to more,
higher quality information.
“When
you do this sampling, the community you collect represents conditions that
existed over some number of weeks to months, and it can give you a better
measure of long-term conditions than a chemistry measure might,”
comments Dr. Charles.
“Often
when you’re doing the chemistry, you’re just sampling the stream at one time,
or maybe a couple of times. If nutrient conditions happen to be unusually high
or low during that time, the chemistry measurements will not be indicative of
average conditions.”
Cymbella tumida.
This
begs the question: if you want a biological indicator of nutrients, why look at
diatoms as opposed to fish or benthic invertebrates or aquatic macrophytes?
“One
is because they’re algae and they depend on nutrients, so they’re more
sensitive to nutrients than benthic invertebrates are,”
Dr. Charles answers.
“There’s
also a large number of taxa. In any one sample from New Jersey streams you’re
seeing twenty to eighty taxa, and you’re usually counting five or six hundred
valves! And so you’ve got a lot of numbers to work with that you can’t usually
get with the benthic invertebrates and certainly not with fish.
“Diatoms
are pretty diverse genetically, and they have many different strategies for
dealing with a wide range of nutrient levels. So that means there are many
different kinds of indicators, and lots of ecological redundancy, information
redundancy.”
Diatoms
are also inspiring new research into the past—and how to restore more pristine
ecological conditions in the future.
“We’re
looking at diatoms in sediment cores from New Jersey lakes to see how nutrient
conditions have changed over time and in particular to try and get an idea of
what nutrient conditions were like before European settlement,”
remarks Dr. Charles.
“So
we can get an idea of how much they’ve changed and so managers that develop
strategies to improve them have a baseline knowledge of what they could
potentially get back to.”
And
perhaps most important? The team has proven not only that diatoms are sensitive
to and good indicators of nutrient conditions.
They’ve
also shown that New Jersey needs to change its criteria for nutrients in
streams and rivers.
“Because
we applied the biological condition gradient approach that is used by the US
EPA, we’re able to categorize sites in terms of level of impairment,”
adds Dr. Charles.
“If
we compare the phosphorus concentrations associated with the boundaries between
the impaired sites and unimpaired sites, we find that it’s much lower than the
current nutrient criteria that New Jersey uses.
“So,
in order to protect rivers in the state from negative effects of nutrient
concentrations, we recommend they reduce their nutrient criteria from one
hundred down to fifty micrograms per liter — half of what it is now.
“And
it could certainly be less in some parts of northern New Jersey where current
concentrations are already lower than fifty.”
The Biological Condition Gradient (BCG) system
One
final important takeaway from this work is the application of the biological
condition gradient approach to develop a classification system for waterways — an
inherently subjective process.
“A
big advantage of the biological condition gradient is that it can be applied in
any geographical region or ecological setting. You’re basically working with a
scale of disturbance from one to six, where one represents natural conditions,
and six represents highly disturbed,” Dr. Charles explains.
“These
six BCG levels are based on biological communities and ecosystem functions,
which can be defined in a variety of different ways, and you’re describing what
those conditions are for each of these six disturbance categories. So, the idea
is that you could set this up for any group of organisms anywhere in the
country, but you have to calibrate it for that particular place.”
Images of diatom taxa indicating low and high nutrient conditions.
Typically,
a panel of experts familiar with the groups of organisms and places they live
calibrates the BCG for a particular region.
It
reviews diatom counts for samples collected from many sites in the region,
without being given other information about the sites, and then assigns the
sites to one of the six BCG categories.
Then
the team refines the categories, carefully describing the criteria that they
are using to classify a site impaired or unimpaired until they reach an
agreement.
“The
thing that gives this value in terms of monitoring to me, is that the BCG
categories can be linked to the categories that the state uses that are defined
in the Clean Water Act,” remarks Dr. Charles.
“When
the biologists have to make decisions about sites and setting standards or
enforcement actions or any number of other things, they have to tie it into
categories that are defined in regulations.
“One
of the problems that the biologists have had [in doing assessments] is that
they have to give their opinion on a case by case basis, and that was kind of
difficult for them.
“Whereas
with the BCG, you’ve gone through this whole process, involved a lot of other
people, have documented and described the criteria that you’re going to use for
the categorization, so it’s more defensible.”
Coming
next for the researchers along these lines: more sites, eDNA, and citizen
science.
“Some
researchers here including Dr. Marina Potapova are working on approaches using
DNA metabarcoding,” Dr. Charles mentions.
“The
idea of, rather than collecting a sample and doing the analysis under the
microscope, collecting a sample and trying to make a determination of what
organisms are there from the DNA analysis instead.
“Not
sequencing complete genomes, but short fragments of DNA sufficient to identify
most microscopic taxa to be able to say what kind of site the sample came
from.”
This
kind of expanded identification effort may eventually make the entire area more
accessible for everyone — including students and citizen scientists.
“I
would like to be working on some ways to make diatom analysis faster and easier
so that you can involve people who don’t have to have as much experience and
knowledge of diatom taxonomy,” remarks Dr. Charles.
“For
example, if you wanted to have a group of volunteers doing citizen science. I
think it would work well to have some relatively inexpensive or online
taxonomic resources for the local diatom flora that people could use to
identify the key indicator taxa, and then some simple metrics that they could
use.
“They could count how many of the taxa they had in a sample and use a relatively simple program to calculate metrics that they could either use themselves or they could give to the New Jersey DEP.
Karla Lant is a professional freelance science writer and a member of the Society of Environmental Journalists. She also covers other scientific and medical stories as well as technology.
https://www.fondriest.com/news/using-diatoms-as-a-water-quality-indicator.htm
No comments:
Post a Comment