45
An Application of a Hydrologically Networked Watershed Model for Evaluating AMD Treatment Scenarios Mike Strager, Todd Petty, Brady Gutta, Jennifer Fulton, Rick Herd, Vishesh Maskey, Jim Stiles, Julie Svetlik, and Paul Ziemkiewicz Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

An Application of a Hydrologically Networked Watershed Model for Evaluating AMD Treatment Scenarios. Mike Strager, Todd Petty, Brady Gutta, Jennifer Fulton, Rick Herd, Vishesh Maskey, Jim Stiles, Julie Svetlik, and Paul Ziemkiewicz. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

An Application of a Hydrologically Networked Watershed Model for

Evaluating AMD Treatment Scenarios

Mike Strager, Todd Petty, Brady Gutta, Jennifer Fulton, Rick Herd, Vishesh Maskey,

Jim Stiles, Julie Svetlik, and Paul Ziemkiewicz

Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Page 2: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 3: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Project Goal

• Restore sustainable fisheries in the majority of WV stream miles lost to historic, pre-law coal mining.

• 2,775 AMD impaired stream miles

• 114 10 digit HUCs

Page 4: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Objectives

1. Assist the WVDEP in developing a strategic, watershed-based approach to efficiently determine acid mine drainage (AMD) restoration needs

2. Develop restoration plans that maximize statewide recovery of cold- and warm-water fisheries

3. Assess the outcome (ecological and economic) of this effort

Page 5: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Stream Data•Water Chemistry•Temperature•Instream Habitat•Biological communities•Ecosystem processes

GIS-based Watershed Model

Watershed Restoration Master Plan

• 5 year plan• Priority implementation sequence• Expected costs and fisheries benefits• General guidance regarding reclamation

project designs

Landscape Data•Land Cover•Geology•Drainage Networks•Mine Data•Expected Development•Mine pool elevations

Monitoring & Assessment• Assess progress towards implementing

the master plan

Fishery / Ecological Priorities•Priorities to maximize recovery of coldwater and warmwater fisheries (EcoUnits).

•Reach scale and subwatershed (10-12 digit HUC) scale priorities.

•Points to stream segments where recovered fisheries are possible, and if recovered, would be highly valuable.

Reclamation Priorities•Action-by-action priorities needed to recover fisheries priorities.

• Implementation of at-source, in situ, and instream reclamation actions.

•Maximize cost:benefit efficiency.

Reclamation Design• Detailed engineering design of priority

reclamation projects

Project Implementation• Construction of priority reclamation

projects

Stakeholder Input

Page 6: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Need

• Integrate various chemical and ecological modeling components

• Spatial data

• Reproducible

• Standardize

• Visually illustrate remediation alternative outcomes

Page 7: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Chemical costs for AMD treatment

Page 8: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

-1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5

WV

Str

ea

m C

on

diti

on

In

de

x

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

ReferenceModerate MiningIntensive Mining

WVSCI = 52.3 * exp (-0.504 x PC1)R2 = 0.804d.f. = 33

PC 1pH (-0.856)Alkalinity (-0.685)

Conductivity (0.851)Acidity (0.706)Hardness (0.684)Sulfates (0.862)Aluminum (0.934)Chromium (0.661)Iron (0.890)Manganese (0.893)Nickel (0.910)

Ecological Condition Models (bugs)

f (PC1 (80%), CVPC1 (9%))

Page 9: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

0

3

6

9

12

15

18

21

0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21

Expected Species Richness

Obs

erve

d Sp

ecie

s R

ichn

ess

Good WQ / Low Mine Intensity Region

Good WQ / High Mine Intensity Region

Bad WQ / High Mine Intensity Region

Ecological Condition Models (Fishes)

f (basin area (80%), spatial position (8%))

Page 10: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Spatial AnalysisSpatial Analysis

• Location plays an important role in watershed management

• Spatial analysis quantifies relationships between locations

• Geographic Information Systems (GIS) aids in the analysis

Page 11: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Decision Support SystemDecision Support System

• An interactive, computer-based system designed to support a user or group of users in achieving a higher effectiveness of decision making

• Functions: – explore solutions by building alternatives – allow user interaction and input– provide for flexible data and analysis capabilities

(Jankowski, 1995)

Page 12: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Questions to Address:Questions to Address:

• What are average and low flows for non-gauged streams and unsampled sites?

• What are water quality conditions downstream of sampling?

• Where should abatement activities be focused?

Page 13: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Mass balance water quality prediction

• Mass balance

5

“Smart” accumulator

9

3

1

6Note:

Sampled

Modeled

5

11

3

1

8

Page 14: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Segment-level watersheds

Outlet

Page 15: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 16: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 17: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 18: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 19: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 20: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 21: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 22: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 23: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Select study area

Page 24: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 25: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 26: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 27: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 28: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 29: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

Mass balance water quality prediction

• Mass balance

5

“Smart” accumulator

9

3

1

6Note:

Sampled

Modeled

5

11

3

1

8

Page 30: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 31: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 32: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 33: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

WV Stream Condition Index

Page 34: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 35: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 36: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 37: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 38: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 39: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 40: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 41: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 42: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 43: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 44: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA
Page 45: Presentation for the 2008 PA AMR and Coal Mining Heritage Conference, State College, PA

SummarySummary

• Spatial decision support system allows integration of components

• Hydrologically networked watersheds linked for “smart” mass balance model

• A tool for repeatable, transferable, standardized information for watershed management