Macroinvertebrate Bioassessment
Standard Operating Procedures (SOP)
and Metric Spreadsheets
Georgia EPD Macroinvertebrate Biological Assessment Workshop for Wadeable Streams
Update October 2008: More Macroinvertebrate Training Workshops Planned
Due to the positive response to the August 2008 workshop, more training workshops are planned for a later time. If you are interested in future workshops, please submit an e-mail application so that we can place you on the list.
If you have specific Macroinvertebrate questions or concerns that the workshop agenda needs to address, please email to address in application with subject line "Workshop Questions ".
Click here for more details on future workshops
(Email Application) |
Starting in the mid 1980’s, biologists for the Watershed Planning and Monitoring Program (WPMP) of the EPD – Watershed Protection Branch began adopting US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) protocols for watershed assessments and subsequently developed Standard Operating Procedures for macroinvertebrate assessments of streams. From 1998 to 2001 USEPA, along with the assistance of the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), refined the national level III ecoregions. Within each ecoregion, USEPA and NRCS also refined and delineated more localized level IV ecoregions, or subecoregions.
In the early 2000’s, Columbus State University (CSU) was contracted by the EPD – Watershed Protection Branch to develop macroinvertebrate metric indices that would take into account the ecological differences of Georgia’s subecoregions. Using land-use GIS data CSU delineated watersheds across all gradients of human disturbance (from least impacted, or reference, to the most heavily impacted) for second to fourth order streams statewide. Streams from across the gradient of human disturbance were sampled and analyzed from each of Georgia’s subecoregions. Using the sampling data CSU developed 24 discrete metric indices, including one tidal index. To go along with these indices a standardized numerical scoring system was developed which can then be translated into a 5-step descriptive classification system that ranks a stream’s health as Very Good, Good, Fair, Poor or Very Poor.
Currently, biologists from the Ambient Monitoring Unit (AMU) in WPMP are working on determining criteria for listing streams on the 303(d) list for impaired water bodies based on macroinvertebrate biology data. Each year AMU collects new site data to help increase the ability in which the classification system is able to discriminate all environmental gradients. AMU also periodically returns to randomly selected sample sites to gather more data for environmental gradient discrimination and to monitor possible changes due to human disturbance or restoration efforts.
Future projects include evaluating possible differences between drought and non-drought conditions, and differences between clear-water and black-water streams that occur in the same subecoregion. Other future projects include developing additional biological criteria and methods using periphyton (attached algae) as indicators, and coordinating AMU data with Georgia Wildlife Resources Division (WRD) fish data to get a more complete picture of biological integrity and ecological function of Georgia’s streams.
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SOP Supporting Documents: |
- Taxonomic References *Coming Soon*
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Ecoregion Metric Spreadsheets
The excel spreadsheets and associated documents have been compressed into a separate zip file for each subecoregion
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