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The Pomperaug River
Watershed Coalition Inc.
39 Sherman Hill Road
Suite 103 C
Woodbury, CT 06798

Phone: 203.263.0076
James Belden, Exec. Dir.
Carol Haskins, Outreach
Amy Burton, Admin.
Watershed Meter - Complete Description

   What is the Watershed                 Meter?

The Watershed Meter is a visual indicator for monitoring the hydrological conditions in our three rivers and groundwater. It is comprised of two sections:

      First, the Habitat Meter monitors habitat conditions for fish based on the daily reading of

Watershed Meter
Streamflow / Habitat Groundwater
Pomperaug Nonnewaug Weekeepeemee
Pomperaug Historical Detail Nonnewaug Historical Detail Weekeepeemee Historical Detail
Southbury
Southbury Historical Detail

streamflow volume as it relates to a MesoHABSIM study conducted for the organization in 2005.

      Second, the Groundwater Meter monitors the groundwater level as it relates to the historical record compiled since 1993. For both meters, data is provided daily from guages operated by the USGS.

The Habitat (Streamflow) Meter

The Habitat Meter monitors streamflow and the resulting habitat conditions in each of our three rivers on a daily basis using a graphical display similar to a traffic light. The meter is a simplified respresentation of the ACTogram images recommended in the 2005 UMass MesoHABSIM Report as the primary management tool for assessing streamflow conditions.

 

How does it work?

Logic / Computations

Each Level has an associated days duration counter, or "clock" as the scientists like to call them, as well as three threshold parameters that vary depending on which Bioperiod for fish fauna is currently in effect: a Base Flow threshold, a Persistent Days Duration threshold and a Catastrophic Days Duration threshold. The clock keeps a tally of the number of consecutive days the USGS dishcharge flow guage has been below the Base Flow threshold for a given Level. The method by which the program calculates the days duration counter (clock count) and determines the color status for each of the three Levels follows:

1) On the transition day to a new bioperiod the clocks are reset to zero and all all three threshold parameters are set to those for the new bioperiod.

2) Each day the actual discharge flow is compared to the flow threshold.

3) If the discharge flow is below the flow threshold the clock is incremented by one.

4) It takes two consecutive days of flows at or above the flow threshold to reset the clock to zero. On the first such day the clock count is divided in half.

5) The clock count is compared to the days duration thresholds. If it is equal to or greater than the catastrophic days duration threshold a red status is assigned to the Level. If it is equal to or greater than the persistent days duration threshold a yellow status is assigned. Any lesser value assigns a green status.

The process by which the Habitat Meter simplifies the ACTogram summary to one color-coded signal is by scanning each Level and color status for the worst-case habitat condition. The hierarchical ranking system uses the color as the primary element and the Level as the secondary element. From worst to best are: red, yellow, green and Level 3, Level 2 and Level 1 respectively.    

Bioperiod transitions present a unique situation for the Habitat Meter.  Since the clocks reset to zero, the Habitat Meter will continue to signal the ACT color status from the last day of the prior bioperiod (termed Prior Bioperiod Overlap or PBO) as long as the prior bioperiod's ACT color status is worse than the current bioperiod's status and the current daily discharge flow remains below the flow threshold for the current bioperiod; in essence, until a significant precipitation event validates the current clock count.  When either of these conditions is negated the current bioperiod ACT clock and color status are activated. 

 

Links:

Habitat Meter - Simplified representation of the the ACTogram Summary.

ACTogram Summary - Current day, 3 river Summary.

Pomperaug ACT Detail - Two year running history.

Nonnewaug ACT Detail - Two year running history.

Weekeepeemee ACT Detail - Two year running history.

BioPeriod Parameters - MesoHabsim Table 11 (Flow Management Criteria).

2005 UMass MesoHABSIM Study - Complete study inclusive of management summary and all appendicies.

USGS National Water Information Website - The USGS discharge flow guages provide the data input for the Habitat Meter. Visit their website to explore all the information and services they provide.

 

Glossary of Terms:

ACTogram - Assessment of Continuous Thresholds images. A color coded visual chart that plots the number of consecutive days the streamflow has been below either of three designated thresholds.

Bioperiod - The significant biological stages for fish and their corresponding time periods during the year.

Catastrophic Days Duration - The number of consecutive days threshold which, when exceeded, signifies a disastrous habitat situation for fish. The Habitat Meter Signal turns Red.

Level 1 (Common) Events - Streamflow thresholds and days duration parameters set at levels that normally occur over the course of annual cycles and generally provide suitable habitat.

Level 2 (Critical) Events - Streamflow thresholds and days duration parameters set at levels that adversely impact habitat should occur infrequently.

Level 3 (Rare) Events - Streamflow thresholds and days duration parameters set at levels that drastically impact habitat and should rarely occur.

Persistent Days Duration - The number of consecutive days threshold which, when exceeded, signifies a stressful habitat situation for fish. The Habitat Meter Signal turns Yellow.

 

The Groundwater Meter

The Groundwater Meter monitors well water height and displays a graphical image that relates the current reading to the historical record. Unlike the Habitat Meter, no scientific study has been conducted for the PRWC to determine thresholds as to what levels constitute high or low conditons that might adversely impact the users of the watershed and represent a call to action.

How does it work?

Each day the well water height, as provided by the guage from the USGS, is compared to that months historical record. The height is actually a measurement of depth down to the water. These statistics, gathered manually and via automated means since 1993 for the Southbury guage, summarize the daily median depth to a monthly median for each month of the year. The monthly medians for all years are then broken down to each months percentile statistics together with an associated color code: the greater than the 90th percentile (dark blue), the 76th to 90th percentile (light blue), the 25th to 75th percentile (green), the 10th to 24th percentile (yellow), and the less than the 10th percentile (red). In additon each months lowest and highest medians are recorded. It is against this table that each days depth is compared and assigned a signal diplaying the color value. The color codes are congruous to those used by the USGS in their online web page "Groundwater Watch". The Blues represent higher well water, Green average or normal height, Yellow lower levels, and Red very low levels. If the level exceeds the prerecorded highest or lowest level the Blue or Red signal will show the letter "R" (i.e., Record) in its center. The meter also keeps track of the continuous number of days that the level has remained within each given percentile.

Links:

Southbury Detail - Southbury guage two year running history

412916073121701 - CT-SB 42 SOUTHBURY, CT - USGS Southbury site summary "Groundwater Watch"






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