| USGS Series |
Water-Resources Investigations Report |
| Report Number |
94-4061 |
| Title |
Water-quality assessment of the Rio Grande Valley study unit, Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas; analysis of selected nutrient, suspended-sediment, and pesticide data |
| Edition |
- |
| Language |
ENGLISH |
| Author(s) |
Anderholm, S. K.; Radell, M. J.; Richey, S. F. |
| Year |
1995 |
| Originating office |
|
| USGS Library Call Number |
(200) WRi no.94-4061 |
| Physical description |
xiv, 203 p. :ill., maps ;28 cm. |
| ISBN |
|
Abstract
This report contains a summary of data compiled from sources
throughout the Rio Grande Valley study unit of the National Water-
Quality Assessment program. Information presented includes the
sources and types of water-quality data available, the utility of
water-quality data for statistical analysis, and a description of
recent water-quality conditions and trends and their relation to
natural and human factors. Water-quality data are limited to
concentrations of selected nutrient species in surface water and
ground water, concentrations of suspended sediment and suspended
solids in surface water, and pesticides in surface water, ground
water, and biota.
The Rio Grande Valley study unit includes about 45,900 square
miles in Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas upstream from the
streamflow-monitoring station Rio Grande at El Paso, Texas. The
area also includes the San Luis Closed Basin and the surface-water
closed basins east of the Continental Divide and north of the
United States-Mexico international border. The Rio Grande drains
about 29,300 square miles in these States; the remainder of the
study unit area is in closed basins.
Concentrations of all nutrients found in surface-water
samples collected from the Rio Grande, with the exception of
phosphorus, generally remained nearly constant from the
northernmost station in the study unit to Rio Grande near Isleta,
where concentrations were larger by an order of magnitude. Total
nitrogen and total phosphorus loads increased downstream between
Lobatos, Colorado, and Albuquerque, New Mexico. Nutrient
concentrations remained elevated with slight variations until
downstream from Elephant Butte Reservoir, where nutrient
concentrations were lower. Nutrient concentrations then increased
downstream from the reservoir, as evidenced by elevated
concentrations at Rio Grande at El Paso, Texas.
Suspended-sediment concentrations were similar at stations
upstream from Otowi Bridge near San Ildefonso, New Mexico. The
concentration and estimated load were nearly two orders of
magnitude larger at this station relative to upstream stations.
Cochiti Lake allows suspended sediment to settle, thus the
resulting concentration is substantially lower downstream from
the reservoir. Downstream from Cochiti Lake, concentrations again
increased due to inflow from tributaries, other ephemeral streams
and arroyos, and agricultural and urban areas. Two ephemeral
tributaries (Rio Puerco and Rio Salado, which are south of
Albuquerque) contribute substantial amounts of suspended sediment
to the Rio Grande. Suspended-sediment concentrations in the Rio
Grande just downstream from Elephant Butte Dam decreased by
nearly three orders of magnitude due to settling in the reservoir.
Concentrations then increased due to agricultural and urban
impacts downstream from the reservoir.
Nutrients in ground water in the study unit do not appear to
be a widespread problem. However, localized areas that have
elevated nitrate concentrations have been documented. The largest
median nitrate concentration was found in water from wells
located in the Basin and Range-mountains-urban data stratum (3.0
milligrams per liter) and the smallest median nitrate
concentration was found in water from wells located in the
Southern Rocky Mountains-mountains-forest data stratum (0.08
milligram per liter). Few (3 percent) nitrate concentrations in
water from wells in all data strata were greater than 10
milligrams per liter, and most (82 percent) were less than 2
milligrams per liter. Comparison of nitrate concentrations in
water from wells located in specific land-use settings across all
hydrogeologic settings, with the exception of the Colorado
Plateau, indicated that the largest median nitrate concentration
was associated with rangeland land use and that larger nitrate
concentrations were found in water from shallow wells. Water from
wells located in areas of rangeland land use consistently had
larger median nutrient concentrations than water from wells in
areas of other land uses.
The largest median ammonia concentration was in water from
wells located in the Colorado Plateau-San Juan Basin-rangeland
data stratum (0.27 milligram per liter). Most median ammonia
concentrations were less than 0.03 milligram per liter,
indicating that elevated ammonia concentrations are not a major
issue in the study unit.
The largest median orthophosphate concentration was found in
water from wells located in the Southern Rocky Mountains-
mountains-forest data stratum (0.15 milligram per liter) and the
smallest was found in water from wells located in the Basin and
Range-mountains-urban data stratum (0.02 milligram per liter).
Most orthophosphate concentrations (85 percent) sampled were less
than 0.2 milligram per liter, indicating that elevated
orthophosphate concentrations are not a major issue in the study
unit.
Pesticide analyses were available for only 38 ground-water
sampling sites in the Rio Grande Valley study unit. Diazinon, at a
concentration of 0.01 microgram per liter, was the only pesticide
detected and it was detected at only one site. More study is
needed to determine if pesticides are affecting ground-water
quality in the Rio Grande Valley study unit.
Surface-water biological pesticide data were inadequate for
in-depth analysis. The primary sources of data were the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Geological Survey. In the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service study p,p'-DDE, a degradation product
of DDT, was detected most frequently; highest concentrations were
found at Stahman Farms in carp (6.3 micrograms per gram wet-
weight) and at Hatch in Western kingbird (5.1 micrograms per gram
wet-weight). In the U.S. Geological Survey study of Bosque del
Apache National Wildlife Refuge no detectable organochlorine
concentrations were found in plants, but detectable levels of
p,p'-DDE were found in coot and carp, with a maximum concentration
of 0.12 microgram per gram wet-weight found in coot.