Factsheet – Examining Anthropogenic Impacts on the Wabash River System
A research project funded by the Indiana Water Resources Research Center through the U.S. Geological Survey’s 104B annual base grants (section 104 of the Water Resources Research Act of 1984, as amended).
Start Date: 2017-03-01
End Date: 2018-02-28
Total Federal Funds: $15,000
Total Non-Federal Funds: $31,865
The Wabash River is a large meandering stream that stretches 471 miles from Ohio through Indiana, where it ultimately joins the Ohio River (Figure 1). This study focused on a small stretch of the Wabash River near Terre Haute, Indiana.
The Wabash River Valley currently delivers some of the highest nutrient yields to the Mississippi River waterways. Of the more than 800 watersheds in the US that contribute nutrients to the Gulf of Mexico, multiple watersheds within the Wabash River Valley have been identified among the most substantial sources for nutrient pollution.
While aquatic eutrophication (overabundance of nutrients causing excessive algae growth in a waterbody) is commonly viewed as a nuisance because it leads to low water clarity, low water quality, unpleasant odors, and an unfavorable shift in the color of the water, eutrophication has many more serious implications. Because of a lengthy history of industrial, thermal, sewage, and agricultural pollution and, in its more recent history, severe cases of invasive species such as Asian carp, the Wabash River Valley is emblematic of anthropogenically-modified waterways in the Midwestern region of the US.
Research Objectives
1. Expand preliminary analyses of the anthropogenic impacts upon water conditions in the Wabash River Valley and determine its influence on the seasonal variation in the diatom (single-celled or colonial algae with silica skeletons) community and water chemistry. Seven sites were analyzed, including several upstream from Otter Creek, one near the confluence, one within the city of Terre Haute, and several downstream from Terre Haute to quantify seasonal variations in nutrient influx and its impacts on the aquatic environment. Stream chemistry and the diatom community was sampled for 1.5 years from each site to provide a natural baseline for changes that occurred.
2. Explore evidence of invasive diatom species associated with the introduction of Asian Carp and their potential to spread from the Wabash River to the surrounding lake systems. Sediment cores were collected and dated from several lakes near the Wabash River to determine the timing of the spread of the invasive diatom species (Discostella asterocostata) to the surrounding aquatic environments. Fish gut contents were also sampled from fish collected in the Wabash River over the past ~60 years to determine when D