New Pollinator Conservation Specialist Jessica Butters Joins PRI Staff

New Pollinator Conservation Specialist Jessica Butters Joins PRI Staff

Prairie Rivers of Iowa’s new Pollinator Conservation Specialist Jessica Butters’s background includes extensive knowledge about Iowa’s ecosystems and native bee conservation. She’s a graduate of Kansas State University (KSU) with a Master’s of Science in Entomology and recently completed work as a research assistant organizing and analyzing a large dataset concerning native bee presence in soybean in fields.

“We are thrilled to have her join our staff and look forward to some significant contributions towards pollinator and native plant habitat creation, restoration and education throughout Iowa,” says Executive Director Penny Brown Huber.

Jessica has a history of collaboration that will serve her well in this new position. As a part of the team at Kansas State, she has co-authored publications on topics ranging from Providing for Pollinators: Conserving and Integrating Natural Habitats to Native Flowering Border Crops Attract High Pollinator Abundance and Diversity. At KSU she managed two projects that gave her and others a greater understanding of native plant and insect interactions, and landowner viewpoints towards conservation efforts and practices.

Connecting with the public is an area of expertise Jessica honed while serving as an insect zoo tour guide at KSU and as a private tutor where she was able to synthesize scientific information into something simple, fun, and informational to school children and diverse audiences. Central Iowa audiences will get their first taste of her expertise during the Ames Public Library’s Birds, Bees and Pollinators EcoChat on April 28.

Besides being a great presenter, Jessica’s scientific skills are impressive as well. She is just as comfortable while conducting research and analyzing data, creating maps using ArcGIS and R, identifying native pollinators and plants, talking about sustainable agriculture or creating the perfect bee house. They are skillsets that are critical when considering the challenges pollinators currently face in Iowa and beyond.

Please welcome Jessica to the Prairie Rivers team, and “bee” sure to reach out, say hello, and call upon her expertise when you need assistance with your next pollinator garden, native prairie restoration, or educational event.

During the application process, Jessica related, “I believe my research experience, passion for public relations, and solid bee and Iowa ecology background, blend perfectly together for this position.” We could not agree more!

Monarch in Native Prairie
Bumble Bee
Kids On the Byway Program
The Mystery of the Orange Creek

The Mystery of the Orange Creek

orange colored water in a creek

“Is this pollution?”  I received this photo, taken at 1PM on March 24, from Ames High School student Oskar Niesen.  I met Oskar and other students in Mr. Todd’s environmental science classes for the first time in February, when we talked in the classroom about issues and solutions in Iowa waterways.  The class was interested in testing water quality, so I met them again at the creek on March 22 and showed them how.

Let’s call the site of the incident “Ames High Creek.”  It joins Ioway Creek near the disk golf course and originates with a 60 inch storm sewer pipe near the Richard Pohl Memorial Preserve (Ames High Prairie).  The pipe drains several neighborhoods in north Ames (including mine) that were built before modern development ordinances requiring detention ponds.  I’ve taken video of the torrent of water that comes out of the storm sewer after a heavy rain, and have seen the bank erosion it causes.  I’ve also tested the water after rains and found high levels of bacteria, sediment and phosphorus levels in this creek during heavy rains.  If people don’t pick up their trash, pet waste, or yard waste, there’s nothing to stop it from washing into to the creek.  So I was prepared to answer “yes, the orange-brown color must be pollution.”

Later that evening, I visited the site and chatted with Jake Moore and Liz Calhoun with the City’s stormwater program.  If someone had let muddy water wash off a construction site, or someone was pouring chemicals down the storm sewer, this would violate city ordinances and they would be the people to check up on it.  But the timing wasn’t consistent with construction site runoff.  There hadn’t been more than trace rain since Tuesday March 22nd.

orange stain at water's edge

 Oskar had talked with a geology professor at Iowa State (Dr. Elizabeth Swanner) and suggested another possibility: iron oxide (rust), perhaps formed by naturally occurring bacteria.  As Oskar explained “there are generally 3 types of iron oxide formations. One is a stain that we see now, the second is called flocculent iron which is a cloud that I saw then, the third is an iridescent film on the top.  Bacteria tend to form all three.” At 5:00 on March 24, when I followed up on Oskar’s tip, the water had cleared up and there was no iridescent film, but there was stain on the rocks and at the water’s edge all the way up to the storm sewer outlet.

water flushed from hydrant

Hydrant flushing is done every year with the express purpose of flushing out iron oxide and other mineral deposits that can clog water mains.  Liz Calhoun confirmed that crews flushed hydrants in neighborhoods connected to this storm sewer on March 24.  A little rust in water can stain laundry but is harmless to people and fish.  A release of drinking water can kill fish if it causes a sudden temperature change (this happened last summer when a water main broke) but in this case, we think there’s nothing to worry about.  Mystery solved!  The only thing more gratifying than working with curious young people and helpful colleagues is a happy ending for water quality!

Prairie Rivers of Iowa Releases Story County Water Quality Monitoring Annual Report

Prairie Rivers of Iowa Releases Story County Water Quality Monitoring Annual Report

Prairie Rivers of Iowa has just released an annual report investigating water quality in streams and lakes around Story County. Prairie Rivers of Iowa worked with Story County Conservation, the City of Ames, and other partners in 2020 to initiate a locally-led water monitoring program including both volunteer and laboratory testing.

The report’s author Prairie Rivers of Iowa Water Quality Specialist Dan Haug states, “Our partners and volunteers have gone to a lot of trouble to test rivers and lakes across the county, so we take seriously the job of interpreting the data.”  He continues, “It’s only the second year of the program, but we’re starting to see patterns that can help us evaluate nutrient reduction efforts and improve our streams for recreation and fisheries.

Water Quality Monitoring in Story County Annual Report Cover

Volunteer Rick Dietz and Prairie Rivers of Iowa Board President Reed Riskedahl test phosphorous in a tributary of Ioway Creek.

Some of the key findings detailed in the report include the risks of waterborne illnesses, algae blooms in lakes and streams, the impacts to aquatic life and the effects of excess nutrients being sent downstream, eventually to the Gulf of Mexico.

“The water monitoring planning team is working hard to bring together all the resources we can to conduct monthly water testing, equip volunteers, educate elected officials and the public about the many water quality issues in our lakes, rivers and streams,” according to Haug.

In 2021, E. coli bacteria was usually low at swimming beaches and parts of the South Skunk River, but high in most creeks. The influence of nitrogen and phosphorus loads from Story County did not have as much influence on hypoxia contamination to Gulf of Mexico in 2021 due to a dry year, but the plan calls for continued monitoring to determine the effects during normal to wet periods helping to identify hot spots and evaluate whether conservation practices are working.

Water quality monitoring results in Story County did however reveal that during dry conditions in 2021, the highest levels of nitrogen and phosphorus were found below wastewater treatment plants. Wastewater effluent may be contributing to low dissolved oxygen levels in some streams harming aquatic invertebrates yet more monitoring is needed to establish patterns.

Other findings during the past year conclude that untreated stormwater from older neighborhoods has extremely high levels of sediment, phosphorus and bacteria.

Water monitoring was guided by a ten-year plan written by nine local partners and facilitated by Prairie Rivers of Iowa.

Water samples were collected monthly from 15 sites and weekly from three sites, with laboratory support provided by the City of Ames. Story County Conservation launched a volunteer monitoring program with 17 individuals and one business participating. Prairie of Iowa used special hardware to collect samples of runoff from rainstorms.

The entire Story County 10-year Water Quality Monitoring Plan, Annual Report, water quality updates, real-time data and educational articles can be found here.

The State of Pollinators in Iowa

The State of Pollinators in Iowa

Special Note: This blog post is based on a presentation made by former PRI Watersheds and Wildlife Coordinator David Stein. Editing and Design by PRI PR & Marketing Coordinator Mike Kellner.

Pollinators in Iowa are disappearing at an alarming rate due to climate change, disappearing habitat, pesticide use, and disease.

Prior to European settlement, about 85% of Iowa was covered with prairies, grasslands, wetlands, and forests. Now, less than one-tenth of a percent of Iowa’s original prairies are left while the rest of its land has been plowed for cultivation, cleared for development, or otherwise altered creating a lack of habitat, food, and water for pollinators in our state. In a sense, Iowa’s once-lush landscape has become a virtual desert, where more often than not, there is no food or water for pollinators sometimes as far as the eye can see.

Pre-Settlement Pollinator Habitat in Iowa
Pre-Settlement Pollinator and Wildlife Habitat in Iowa
Former land cover can give us insight into how to best currently manage and restore pollinator and wildlife habitat
Post Settlement Pollinator Habitat in Iowa
Post Settlement Pollinator and Wildlife Habitat in Iowa
Wetlands, forests, and most significantly, prairies and grasslands have all seen reductions resulting in habitat loss.  
Just Some of the Historic Trends in Pollinator Decline in Iowa
ORIGINAL SPECIES LIST

  •  Skippers —47 Species
  • Hairstreaks and Blues — 25 Species
  • White, Yellow, Orange Butterflies — 11 Species
  • Brush-Footed Butterflies — 38 Species
  • Swallowtails — 6 Species
  • Metalmark Butterflies —1 Species
MOST RECENT SURVEY

  • Skippers 27 Species — (43% loss)
  • Hairstreaks and Blues — 14 Species (44% loss)
  • White, Yellow, Orange Butterflies — 6 Species (45% loss)
  • Brush-Footed Butterflies — 25 Species (35% loss)
  • Swallowtails — 4 Species (33% loss)
  • Metalmark Butterflies —  0 Species (100% loss; not seen since 1930)
Some Species You Will Never See Again
Other Threatened and Endangered Butterflies
Acadian Hairstreak
Aphrodite Fritillary
Banded Hairstreak
Black Dash
Broad Winged Skipper
Byssus Skipper
Columbine Duskywing
Common Ringlet
Common Roadside Skipper
Compton Tortoiseshell
Crossline Skipper
Dakota Skipper
Dion Skipper
Dreamy Duskywing

Dusted Skipper
Edward’s Hairstreak
Eyed Brown
Gorgone Checkerspot
Gray Comma
Harvester
Hayhurst’s Scallopwing
Henry’s Elfin
Hickory Hairstreak
Horace’s Duskywing
Juniper Hairstreak
Juvenal’s Duskywing
Leonard’s Skipper
Little Glassywing

Long Dash
Meadow Fritillary
Melissa Blue
Monarch
Mottled Duskywing
Mulberry Wing
Northern Broken Dash
Northern Pearly Eye
Ottoe Skipper
Ozark Baltimore
Pawnee Skipper
Pepper & Salt Skipper
Pipevine Swallowtail
Poweshiek Skipperling

 

Purplish Copper
Reakirt’s Blue
Regal Fritillary
Silver Bordered Fritillary
Silvery Blue
Sleepy Duskywing
Southern Cloudywing
Striped Hairstreak
Swamp Metalmark
Swarthy Skipper
Two Spotted Skipper
White M Hairstreak
Wild Indigo Duskywing
Zabulon Skipper
Zebra Swallowtail
Threatened and Endangered Bumble Bees — They Are Still Here, Let’s Work Together to Protect Them While We Still Can!
Rusty Patched Bumble Bee

Rusty Patched Bumble Bee

American Bumble Bee

American Bumble Bee

Plains Bumble Bee

Plains Bumble Bee

Yellow Bumble Bee

Yellow Bumble Bee

Steps We All Can Take to Reduce Pollinator Decline
• Learn from the past
• Plant a lot of flowers of different species
• Use native plants
• Reintroduce rare plants
• Don’t waste space on turf
• Remove invasive species
• Diversify agriculture
• Treat ecosystems as vital infrastructure
Native Plant Diversity
Diversified Agriculture
Visit with our Watersheds and Wildlife program to learn more about helping pollinators by planting the right native host plants for for food and nectar, using alternative lawn seed mixes, best practices for nesting and much more! 

Legacy Sediment for Fourth Graders

Legacy Sediment for Fourth Graders

For Iowa History Month, I’d like to talk about legacy sediment—historic erosion that has a big influence on sediment, phosphorus, and fisheries in rivers today.  For a change of pace, this article is written at the fourth-grade reading level.  I like big words like “fluvial geomorphology” but not everyone does.  Okay!  Let’s have some fun learning!

The faster the water moves, the more stuff it can carry. Fast-moving water washes away the tiny stones (sand and silt).  It leaves behind the bigger stones (gravel). Slower moving water washes away the silt but leaves behind the sand.  If a beaver or a person dams up the water and it really slows down, even the silt settles out. That’s why mountain streams have rocky bottoms but lowland streams have muddy bottoms. It’s also why there are sand bars on the inside of river bends where the water moves more slowly.

Photo by Dan Haug. Note the transition from silt to sand to gravel to rocks going left to right from slower to faster water.

Plants’ roots and leaves can keep dirt from washing away, and so do the tiny things that live on plant roots. They actually make a glue that holds the dirt together!  There’s been a few times when dirt and rocks moved a lot faster than normal because there weren’t any plants growing. Twelve thousand years ago, there weren’t any plants in my part of Iowa because the land was covered in a big sheet of melting ice. It happened again 190 years ago when farmers started moving in and plowing up the grass to grow crops. The ground was bare for most of the year, so dirt washed off the hills and filled up the valleys. 90 years ago, farmers realized this was a problem and got more careful about how they plowed. But then 50 years ago some of them forgot and weren’t as careful.  But they remembered again, so it’s better now. (Read more about this history here)

Figure adapted from Beck et al. 2018. Photo by Hanna McBrearty.

There’s still lots of soft mud in the valleys from those days.  That’s a problem because the water moves a lot faster now. Partly that’s because there’s more pavement and fewer marshes. Partly that’s because people straightened out some of the curves in the rivers. The fast water hits the soft mud and makes little canyons all over Iowa. The water can’t get out of the canyons unless there’s a really big flood so it almost never slows down. The canyons are not as pretty as the Grand Canyon and the fish don’t like them as much. The soft mud in the river valleys also has fertilizer in it that can make the water turn green. The fish don’t like that either.

Photo by Dan Haug. Steep bank in Ioway Creek in Ames.

If you like fish and want the ugly canyons to turn into normal-looking rivers you have two choices.

1. You can stop dumping concrete on the river banks and wait. The water will keep washing away dirt on the outside of the river bend. That makes the valley wider. Some day, the bank will cave in. That will make the valley less steep. Some houses and bridges might fall into the river too. That would be exciting!

2. You can use a backhoe to move the dirt around so the valley isn’t as steep and narrow. I like that idea better.  It would also be a good idea to have trees and grass near the river to hold the dirt together.

Photo by Dan Haug. The stream at the Tedesco Environmental Learning Corridor doesn’t look like a canyon anymore because the county brought in a backhoe to restore it.

If you like reading about science and engineering with very small words, I recommend a funny book called Thing Explainer by Randall Munroe.

If you want to learn the big words too, then I think you should listen to Jeff Kospaska at the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Tom Isenhart at Iowa State University, or Billy Beck at ISU Extension.  I learned a lot from them!

The Impaired Waters List is a Missed Opportunity

The Impaired Waters List is a Missed Opportunity

Many Iowans would like to know which lakes and rivers are safe for recreation and good for fishing because that affects how they’ll engage with the outdoors. They would like to know whether water quality is improving, and if not, what kinds of changes on the land would make a difference. Regardless of whether you think the right way to improve water quality is through voluntary projects, legislation, or some combination, we need good information to guide our efforts. However, for all the attention it gets, the 2022 Impaired Waters List does not really tell us which waters are safe for recreation or the direction of statewide trends. We think that’s a missed opportunity.

By the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) own admission:

“An increase or decrease in impaired waters does not necessarily mean that the water quality in the state is worsening or improving. It could be a reflection of the additional monitoring we are conducting, changes in water quality standards, and changes in assessment methodologies. Impaired segments are often used for recreation and fishing, among other uses, so impairment doesn’t mean that the segments are unusable.”

-Roger Bruner, Supervisor, Water Quality Monitoring and Assessment section, IDNR

While there’s a lot of good science that goes into Iowa’s water quality assessment database, the list of impaired waters is not a scientific study of water quality status and trends. (The United States Geological Survey actually does that through a national program you’ve probably never heard of). 303(d) lists are legal documents written by state natural resource agencies for the Environmental Protection Agency, as required by Section 303(d) of the Clean Water Act. Even if the IDNR wanted to make things clearer for the public, many of the terms and categories are defined by federal rules and linked to other regulatory processes.

In other words, the Impaired Waters List is part of a Rube Goldberg machine! If you’d like to comment on the draft list before March 19 — either to ask questions about particular water bodies or to express your opinion on Iowa’s larger approach to water quality — you may benefit from the following explanation of the machine.

Disclaimer: I am not an environmental lawyer or policy expert, and am probably not treating the subject with the seriousness it deserves wink.

I don’t mean to throw shade on the staff at environmental agencies or the Clean Water Act. The 1972 law is the reason why American rivers mostly don’t burst into flames anymore. Some lakes and rivers in Iowa have benefited from the process described above, which results in technical information, stakeholder engagement, and grant funds that can help improve water quality. One example I’m familiar with is Hickory Grove Lake in Story County, which is now on its way to recovery. However, many other water bodies have gotten stuck somewhere in the process. I’ll share some examples from Central Iowa.

Step One: If the water was clean, could you swim or fish in it?

The goal of the Clean Water Act was for our waters to be swimmable and fishable by 1983 (yes, we missed that deadline). “Designated uses” for each lake and stream segment clarify what kind of recreation or aquatic life is possible, and these affect which water quality criteria are applied. For example, the Iowa River at Eldora has plenty of water for fishing, swimming, and paddling (so is designated A1 B-WW1). The South Skunk River at its headwaters near Blairsburg is too shallow for any of these uses, regardless of water quality (so is designated A2 B-WW2). As a result of this difference in designated uses, the Eldora Wastewater Treatment Plant must meet stricter E. coli and ammonia limits than the Blairsburg Sewage Treatment Plant.

However, perhaps one-half of the waters in the database have an asterisk next to the designated use. Most smaller creeks in Iowa are presumed to support primary contact recreation until the IDNR determines otherwise, through on-site investigation and surveys of residents. For example, Long Dick Creek in Hamilton County does not have enough water to float a canoe, but since no permit is affected by this determination, Iowa DNR has never been asked to find out. If they did a use attainability analysis, Long Dick Creek would probably not be on the Impaired Waters List — it has E. coli levels exceeding the primary contact standard, but below the secondary contact standard. For this creek, both the impairment and the protections provided by the Clean Water Act are hypothetical.

When a use attainability analysis is done, the conclusions can be confusing. I had understood secondary contact recreation to mean “shore-fishing” but is often paired with a designated use for aquatic life that implies there are no fish worth catching. I had understood primary contact recreation to mean “deep enough for canoeing”, but IDNR uses it to mean “deep enough to accidentally go swimming if you tip your canoe”.

Step 2: How clean does the water need to be for fishing and swimming?

Here’s an example of how the factual questions about the condition of Iowa’s waters get tangled up in economic and legal questions about how to address it. We know that algae blooms can kill fish and become a nuisance (or a safety issue) for swimmers and boaters. We know that phosphorus and nitrogen contribute to algae blooms in Iowa waters. We have lots of data about nitrogen and phosphorus in Iowa waters. We even had a study by IDNR staff examining the relationship between nutrients and aquatic life. What we still don’t have is numeric criteria to translate nitrogen and phosphorus data into “fully supporting”, “partially supporting” or “not supporting” for fishing and recreational uses of lakes and rivers.

Why? Because water quality criteria are not just used to make sense of the data; they are also used to regulate wastewater treatment plants. Iowa’s Environmental Protection Commission has rejected calls to establish numeric nutrient criteria because they were concerned it would put too heavy a cost on municipalities. It’s a valid concern — one that other states have dealt with through permit variances and nutrient trading systems.

Step 3: Is the water clean enough for fishing or swimming?

Assessments are done every two years using recent (but not current) data. The 2022 cycle uses data from 2016 to 2020.

Don’t expect a comprehensive list. Iowa has many lakes and streams and Iowa DNR does not have the resources to monitor them all. Almost one-half of the waters (49% of the river segments, 48% of lakes and reservoirs, and 18% of wetlands in the database) were not assessed for the 2022 cycle.

Even this is overstating how much we know. Most waters are assigned a designated use reflecting what kind of recreation is possible (Class A) and what kind of aquatic life is possible (Class B). The IDNR has conclusive enough data to say whether or not aquatic life uses are supported for 21% of river segments and 33% of lakes and wetlands. IDNR has conclusive enough data to say whether Recreational Uses are supported for 19% of river segments and 57% of lakes and wetlands.

Step 4: Oh no, the water is too dirty for fishing or swimming!

Local groups are doing water quality monitoring and could help the IDNR assess more water bodies. For example, Prairie Rivers of Iowa and our partners documented E. coli levels in Ioway Creek that were 18 times higher* than the standard! However, since our data was not collected under an IDNR-approved quality assurance plan (and since IDNR rarely approves such plans), the most they can do is put Ioway Creek on a list of “Waters in Need of Further Investigation” (WINOFI). If not for a state law (the Credible Data Law), the Impaired Waters List might be much longer and more worrisome.

*The South Skunk River between Story City and Ames is still on the Impaired Waters List because in 2014, the average (in this case, a geometric mean) E. coli count for the season was 223 colonies per 100mL, almost twice the primary recreation standard (126 colonies/100mL). In Ioway Creek in Ames, Prairie Rivers and our partners documented an E. coli geometric mean of 2,280 colonies/100mL in 2018.

Step 5: How can we clean up the water?

The 303(d) list is not just an embarrassment for the state of Iowa. It’s also a waiting list for a water quality improvement plan. These plans are time-consuming to write, so the IDNR has to prioritize. Bacteria impairments in rivers are considered a lower priority, so the South Skunk River between Story City and Ames has been on the waiting list since 2004. It’s in good company: there are 594 stream segments, lakes, and wetlands that need a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL).

Step 6: Let’s clean up the water!

Some lakes and rivers have water quality improvement plans that were written over a decade ago and haven’t been implemented. I’ve read a few. In the case of the Little Wall Lake plan (2005), the report did not offer any good solutions, and maybe there aren’t any–it’s a shallow lake with a lot of phosphorus in the muck that gets stirred up when it’s windy. In the case of the Raccoon River plan (2008), solutions are recommended, but there are many obstacles to implementing them: both social (many farmers don’t want to) and legal (the Clean Water Act can’t make them).

How to get involved

You can comment on the Draft Impaired Waters List through March 19, 2022, by mailing a letter to:

Iowa Department of Natural Resources
Attention: IR Comments
Water Quality Monitoring & Assessment Section
Wallace State Office Building
502 East 9th Street
Des Moines, IA 50319

Or send an email to: IRcomment@dnr.iowa.gov.

As I’ve said, we think the Impaired Waters List represents a missed opportunity to communicate with the public about threats and opportunities to recreation and fisheries in Iowa waters. We would welcome a discussion about how this gap could be filled.