Best practices for continuous monitoring of temperature and flow in wadeable streams

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Abstract

The United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) is working with its regional offices, states, tribes, river basin commissions and other entities to establish Regional Monitoring Networks (RMNs) for freshwater wadeable streams. To the extent possible, uninterrupted, biological, temperature and hydrologic data will be collected on an ongoing basis at RMN sites, which are primarily located on smaller, minimally disturbed forested streams. The primary purpose of this document is to provide guidance on how to collect accurate, year-round temperature and hydrologic data at ungaged wadeable stream sites. It addresses questions related to equipment needs, sensor configuration, sensor placement, installation techniques, data retrieval, and data processing. This guidance is intended to increase comparability of continuous temperature and hydrologic data collection at RMN sites and to ensure that the data are of sufficient quality to be used in future analyses. It also addresses challenges posed by year-round deployments. These data will be used for detecting temporal trends; providing information that will allow for a better understanding of relationships between biological, thermal, and hydrologic data; predicting and analyzing climate change impacts and quantifying natural variability.

Publication type Report
Publication Subtype Federal Government Series
Title Best practices for continuous monitoring of temperature and flow in wadeable streams
Series number EPA/600/R-13/170F
Year Published 2014
Language English
Publisher U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Contributing office(s) Coop Res Unit Leetown
Description Report: xiv, 70; Appendixes A-K
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