| 
  • If you are citizen of an European Union member nation, you may not use this service unless you are at least 16 years old.

  • You already know Dokkio is an AI-powered assistant to organize & manage your digital files & messages. Very soon, Dokkio will support Outlook as well as One Drive. Check it out today!

View
 

Overview

This version was saved 13 years ago View current version     Page history
Saved by csmitc@gmu.edu
on March 25, 2011 at 3:32:57 pm
 

Spatially Connecting Kids to the Bay - MWEE for FCPS 7th Grade Life Science students

Students will have completed water quality and ecosystem activities prior to this MWEE field experience. You will see those activities referred to (e.g. Beneath the Surface) in the  two Testing the Waters guides posted below.  

Read both the student and teacher's guide to fully understand the activities you will be facilitating. 

 

- Testing the Waters Student Guide           - Testing the Waters Teacher-Interpreter Guide

Fairfax County has 30 watersheds. All of which ultimately flow into the Potomac River and onto the Chesapeake Bay

We will be providing MWEEs in the 4 watersheds below.  Interpreters will make sure kids know where the watershed is located, condition of the watershed & the path water takes to the Bay.



Accotink Creek Watershed - Accotink Creek
Difficult Run Watershed  - Lake Fairfax
Pohick Creek Watershed  - Burke Lake
Bull Run & Cub Run Watersheds  - Bull Run
Summary of Conditions Summary of Conditions Summary of Conditions Summary of Conditions
Streams in the Accotink Creek watershed are substantially degraded, with the majority of tributary systems exhibiting poor habitat and biological conditions. characterized by heavy development throughout most of the watershed > 25% impervious surface Development intensity in the watershed ranges from 8.2 to 27.4%  Colvin Run, which was dammed to form Lake Fairfax, drains areas levels of imperviousness
over 20%.
All drainages in watershed exhibited levels of imperviousness >20%, except South Run subwatershed (9 to 12% impervious cover). South Run was dammed for form Burke Lake. The Fairfax County portion of the Bull Run watershed
has imperviousness less than one percent,
the lowest in the County. Bull Run drains to the Occoquan River. The remainder of Bull Run is found in Pr. Wm and Loudoun counties

Accotink Lake Info      Sedimentation Issue

Friends of Accotink Park-great stewardship projects!

Invertebrates found in Accotink Creek    History

Lake Fairfax Info         Map

Trout stocking dates

Burke Lake on South Run

Because Burke Lake is intensively managed for the fishing resource, this lake is fertilized to increase algae growth.  The zooplankton will feed on the phytoplankton(microscopic algae).  Small fish and some invertebrates will feed on zooplankton; larger fish feed on  smallerones .  Thus the high phosphate fertilizer increases algae growth which reduces water clarity and makes the water a little greener in color.

Bull Run

 

We will be teaching FOUR different stations at EACH stream or lake site.  You will teach the same station each day,students & chaperons will rotate.

In addition to the "Testing the Waters' activity, Interpreters should be able to discuss/engage the kids with the information below to add great value to each station.

 

Station 1: Land Use
Station 2: Water Chemistry
Station 3: Habitat
Station 4: Biology
What is a watershed?
Water Quality  Info. Questions to Ask
Tree leaves as Food for streams
Macroinvertebrate Info. Questions to Ask
Why are wetlands impt?
Water Quality indicators
Importance of Riparian habitats along streams
Cacapon Invert ID
Sedimentation in Streams great visual!
Dissolved Oxygen: video
Importance of Forests to the Bay: video
Bay aquatic insects
How land use affects water quality
  Importance of streams to Bay Leaf Packs
     

Images of invertebrates in healthy streams (not FFX county).

Benthic Macroinvertebrates of Fairfax County

EPA Invertebrates

 

 

To further enhance your knowledge of Chesapeake Bay water quality, click on this Livebinders URL for a folder full of informative links.  

 

Fairfax Counties Stream Protection Study - tells the history behind many of the constructed lakes in the county, effects of urbanization on streams and importance of biological monitoring. http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/dpwes/publications/sps/spsch1.pdf

 

 

Park Information you should know to add value to your station

 

Lake Accotink map.      Read through the history of the lake, why and when it was built.  The last sentence, which is cut off reads...Camp A. A. Humphreys is known as Fort Belvoir.

Description
The headwaters of Accotink Creek are located in the center of Fairfax County and the stream drains southeast  into Accotink Creek which flows into Accotink Bay which meets Gunston Cove which flows into the tidal Potomac River which flows into the Chesapeake Bay.   Accotink creek's connection to the Bay.

Major Streams and Tributaries
Major tributaries to Accotink Creek include Bear Branch, Crook Branch, Daniels Run, Hunters Branch and Long Branch.

Watershed Size
51 square miles, total,  38 square miles within Fairfax County

Unique Features
Lake Accotink, with a surface area of approximately 70 acres, is located in the central portion of the watershed. Approximately 12 square miles of the watershed are not under the jurisdiction of Fairfax County, lying within the City of Fairfax or Fort Belvoir.  Why is Lake Accotink shrinking? Sedimentation! Learn more about sedimentation in Lake Accotink.  They have a HUGE problem with trash flowing into the lake every day.  Loads and loads of trash are removed weekly, but the flow from the neighborhoods is endless.

 

 

 

 

Burke Lake 

 

http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/dpwes/images/sps/ac_datatab.gif

Description

South Run was dammed to fill in this  218 acre lake that opened in 1963 and was constructed as a public fishing lake with monies derived from fishing licenses and federal monies.    As you can see on the map, the dam is located at the south end of the lake.  Water which spills over the dam, flows into South Run, which can can follow all the way to Lake Mercer. Lake Mercer  is impounded by Pohick Creek Dam #1 Dam on the South Run River in Fairfax County, Virginia and is used for flood control and recreation purposes. The watershed for Lake Mercer is 6.2 miles2. From Lake Mercer the water continues to flow into South Run which eventually flows into Pohick Creek which flows into Pohick Bay and onto Gunston Cove and then onto the Potomac River which flows into the Chesapeake Bay.

Watershed Size

The Pohick Creek Watershed, is 36.5 square miles, most of which is in Fairfax County.  Compared to much of Fairfax County and other areas within the Pohick Creek Watershed, Burke Lake has very high quality water, primarily due to the lower development pressure (fewer homes, businesses and roads) in the immediate area around the lake.


If you click on this map, and click satellite in the right corner, you can view the exact area where we will be teaching the students.  Zoom in and then zoom out, and track the water flow all the way to the Bay.  

 

Are nutrients like fertilizer 'bad' for the lake and the Bay?  Yes and in Burke Lake--sometimes no.  The folks from the VA Dept of game and Inland Fisheries feel that the fertilizer added to Burke Lake is immediately uptaken by the microscopic algae(phytoplankton) and as it moves up the food chain it promotes a healthy fishing industry.   A corn-based agricultural fertilizer with a Nitrogen-Phosphate-Potassium ratio of 10-34-0, is applied at a rate of 1 gallon/surface acre of water at a frequency of about once per month from May-September.  They know when it is time to reapply, because the water clears up and the secchi disk depth is 18” or greater. 

In the Chesapeake Bay nutrients, like fertilizer and animal manure, are a BIG problem.  

Why fertilize lakes and ponds? To increase the number of fish. 

As the water temperature increases this spring into summer, students should see an increase in conductivity . 

 

Lake Fairfax map Lake Fairfax is fed by Colvin Run.

 

Bay Daily Blog:  gives you some Bay-related topic to share with the students if time permits.

Thanks so much to Fairfax County Stormwater Planning for lending us their expertise!

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.