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    Home»Sedona News»Yuck! What’s in our Rivers?
    Sedona News

    Yuck! What’s in our Rivers?

    November 5, 20172 Comments
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    logo_sustainabilityallianceBy Darcy Hitchcock, co-founder of the Sustainability Alliance

    Sedona AZ (November 5, 2017) – This article addresses water quality: the pollutants in our rivers, where the pollutants come from, and what can be done. Thank you to the Red Rock Ranger District for helping us compile this information.

    Water Quality Quiz

    1. What percentage of our rivers in the Verde Valley meet the standards for their intended uses?
    2. What is the most common pollutant and where does it come from?
    3. On a scale from 1-5, how clean is Oak Creek and the Verde River?
      (1 = Clean enough for its intended uses to 5 = Significant long-term pollution issues)

    Answers:

    1. About 20%
    2. E. coli from people (when they don’t use the toilets or when they leave diapers behind), their pets (when their masters don’t pick up), and feces from wildlife attracted to garbage left near streams.
    3. The majority of Oak Creek rates a 4, not clean enough for its intended uses.  The Verde River ranges from 1-5 depending on which sections you’re referring to.  The longest sections rate a 3 and a 5.

    What’s the situation?

    In our desert landscape, our rivers are precious.  Each of the stream segments is rated on the degree to which it meets (“attains”) standards for its intended uses.  Obviously, if you have people swimming in a stream, you may have higher standards than if it’s used for farming.

    The chart below shows what percentage of stream-miles from Oak Creek all the way down to Fossil Creek that are currently meeting water quality standards.  Unfortunately, only 20% are clean enough for all the uses we intend for them (the green pie slice).  Almost the same percentage have long-term violations of water quality standards (the red pie slice).  The rest of our streams are somewhere in between.

    20171105_howhealthyareVVstreams

    Using the same categories as in the chart above, click here to see a map of the most polluted rivers in the Verde Valley.

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    What are the causes of these problems?  E. coli is the most prevalent problem, which is responsible for almost 30 percent of the pollution in our streams and rivers.  A main source of this E. coli is from people: ‘going in the woods,’ not picking up after their dogs, or leaving dirty diapers.  It also comes from the feces of mammals attracted to garbage left near the streams.

    Diminished levels of dissolved oxygen (DO) account for nearly 20 percent of our streams’ problems.  DO is the amount of oxygen dissolved in a body of water and is the most important indicator of the health of a body of water.  DO is vital for the survival of aquatic life and the water’s ecosystem.  Wastewater containing organic (oxygen consuming) pollutants, such as fertilizers and animal manure, depletes the dissolved oxygen and harms aquatic life.  Water temperature also affects DO levels.  Colder water can hold more oxygen than warmer water.  As our waters warm, levels of DO decrease.

    Other pollutants include pollution from old mining practices, sediment from fire damage, and human activity including development, off-road vehicles and social trails.

    20171105_waterpollutionbytype

    What can be done?

    Educate the public, locals and visitors alike: Since the most common pollutant is E. Coli, we need to make sure that locals and visitors clean up after themselves and their pets.  Teach “Leave No Trace” ethics.  https://Int.org/learn/7-principles

    Rethink recreation: We love our rivers – to death.  We need to better manage where people go, how many go there at a time, and where certain activities are allowed.  We need to create plans to reduce impacts at high-use recreation sites along perennial waters.  The registration system for Fossil Creek is a model that could be considered for Slide Rock State Park and other popular river access locations.  There are places where off-road vehicles (ORV) still drive in the river.  We need to create appropriate sites for ORV drivers to have fun without disturbing our rivers or neighbors.

    Encourage farmers to better manage their lands.  Nitrogen and phosphorous pollution from fertilizers and manure are both tied to farming practices.  Farmers sometimes use more fertilizer than they need, figuring a bit too much is better than not enough.  When fertilizer runs off, it means it wasn’t taken up by the plants.  It was wasted, and now it’s a pollutant.  But timing when fertilizer is applied and better controlling when it’s needed can save farmers money and save the streams.  Likewise, keeping livestock and their waste out of our streams and rivers keeps nitrogen and phosphorous out of our water.  Resource: https://www.epa.gov/nutrientpollution/sources-and-solutions-agriculture 

    Reprocess mining pollution: If you’ve been to Jerome, you’ve seen the mountain of mine tailings (dump sites for solid waste byproducts of mining).  Many tailings are toxic and damage the environment.  In fact, mining and industrial pollution is all over the county.  According to HomeFacts.com, we have 26 superfund sites in Yavapai County.  Resource: http://www.homefacts.com/environmentalhazards/superfunds/Arizona/Yavapai-County.html 

    When it rains, these toxic materials leach into the soil, groundwater and surface water.  In some situations, however, these trace minerals and metals can be extracted without making the situation worse.  Novel reprocessing technologies to extract valuable metals and minerals from the waste are being developed using mechanical and natural processes, such as bioremediation.  Bioremediation uses microorganisms or plants to consume environmental pollutants.  Some of these plants can then be harvested and burned to collect the metal left in the ash.  Arizona State University has a bioremediation lab working on this innovative technology.

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    2 Comments

    1. Sarah McLean on November 7, 2017 12:30 pm

      How can I help with Educating the Public and Rethinking Recreation? Do you have partners that are working specifically on each effort?

      • Darcy Hitchcock on November 7, 2017 6:10 pm

        Sarah, thanks for your interest and passion to make a difference!

        We are gathering data on sustainability indicators and making people aware of the problems and potential solutions. In addition to publishing the information, we also hope to educate people via a video we are creating for SedonaFreeTV.

        But other organizations (who may not all be members of the Sustainability Alliance) might be the best way for you to get involved. In particular, I suggest Oak Creek Watershed Council, Friends of the Verde Greenway, and Friends of the Forest Sedona. All three groups have a robust public education mission.

        If you want to talk more, please reach me via the email on our website. http://Www.SustainabilityAllianceAZ.org.


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    By Amaya Gayle Gregory

    Throughout the years, we have been trained. Part of the training is to see others as trained, but not ourselves. Even though we are the others that others are trained to see as trained, we tend to miss that little nuance. The training says we must know what’s right and speak out when we see something that runs contrary to our understanding of rightness. We don’t stop to realize that what we see as right isn’t exactly right or it would be the right version that everyone in their right mind knew as right. There are billions of versions of right but ours is the only real right one. Seems fishy, doesn’t it? We spend our days, our lives, catching others — the wrong ones — doing and saying things in support of their versions of right and our training has us jumping on the critical bandwagon lest we be painted in support of the wrong right. What in this crazy world moves us with such amazing force to crave rightness, to need to be seen as right? Read more→
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