Fox River Watershed Investigation - Publication Details
Surface-Water-Quality Assessment of the Upper Illinois River Basin in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin: Pesticides and Other Synthetic Organic Compounds in Water, Sediment, and Biota, 1975-1990
Sullivan, D.J., T.W. Stinson, J.K. Crawford, and A.R. Schmidt, 1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4135
Report Type: fulltext Format: PDF View/Download here
Abstract:
The distribution of pesticides and other
synthetic organic compounds in water, sediment,
and biota in the upper Illinois River Basin in
Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin was examined
from 1987 through 1990 as part of the pilot
National Water-Quality Assessment program
conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey.
Historical data for water and sediment collected
from 1975 through 1986 were similar to data
collected from 1987 through 1990. Some
compounds were detected in concentrations
that exceed U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency water-quality criteria.
Results from pesticide sampling at four
stations in 1988 and 1989 identified several
agricultural pesticides that were detected more
frequently and at higher concentrations in urban
areas than in agricultural areas. Results from
herbicide sampling at 17 stations in the Kankakee
and Iroquois River Basins in 1990 indicated that
atrazine concentrations exceeded the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’s maximum
contaminant level for drinking water during
runoff periods.
Results from sampling for volatile and
semivolatile organic compounds in water indicate
that, with one exception, all stations at which more
than one compound was detected were within
2 miles downstream from the nearest point source.
Detections at two stations in the Chicago urban
area accounted for 37 percent of the total number
of detections. Concentrations of tetrachloroethylene,
trichloroethylene, and 1,2-dichloroethane
from stations in the Des Plaines River Basin
exceeded the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency’s maximum contaminant level for drinking
water in one and two samples from the two
stations in the Chicago area.
Phenols and pentachlorophenols were
detected most frequently in the Des Plaines River
Basin where point-source discharges were
common. Phenol concentrations were significantly
different among the Des Plaines, Kankakee, and
Fox River Basins. Phenols and pentachlorophenols
never exceeded the general use and
secondary contact standards.
Results from a 1989 synoptic survey of
semivolatile organic compounds in sediment
indicate that these compounds were detected
most frequently at sites in the Chicago urban
area. Of the 17 stations at which 10 or more
compounds were detected, 14 were located in
the Des Plaines River subbasin, and 1 was on the
Illinois River main stem. As was the case with
organic compounds in water, each of these sites
was located within 2 miles downstream from point
sources.
Biota samples were collected and analyzed
for organochlorines and polynuclear aromatic
hydrocarbons in 1989 and 1990. The most
commonly detected compound in both years
was p,p’-DDE. National Academy of Science
recommendations for chlordane and dieldrin for
protection of predators were exceeded in 19 and
10 samples, respectively, when the 1989 and 1990
data were combined. In the nine fish-fillet samples
collected in 1989, concentrations exceeded
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency fish tissue
criteria in nine fillets for p,p’-DDE and five fillets
for dieldrin.
Data Record Period: 1975-1988
Data Record Notes: 1975-1988 (IEPA, USACE, USEPA, USGS, NIPCI), 1987-1990 (USGS)
Data Sources: IEPA,USGS
Features: Biota, River/Stream, Sediment
Parameters: Alachlor; Arsenic, As; Atrazine; Cadmium, Cd; Chromium +3; Chromium +6; Chromium, total; Copper, Cu; Iron, Fe; Lead, Pb; Manganese, Mn; Mercury, Hg; PCBs in Whole water sample; Zinc, Zn
Sites - IEPA Station(USGS Station): (5544315), (5549500), (5552200), DT06(5550000), DT09(5551000), DT35(5546700), DT38(5551540), DT46(5552500), DTD02(551700)
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