Significant
Findings
Stream
and River Highlights
Pesticides
(Insecticides, herbicides,
and pesticide metabolites, sampled in water)
-
The herbicides
atrazine, simazine, and tebuthiuron were detected in almost every stream
in the Santee Basin, including those in forested areas, at levels below
aquatic-life and drinking-water guidelines.
-
Four insecticides—malathion,
diazinon, chlorpyrifos, and parathion—exceeded aquatic-life guidelines.
-
No pesticides
exceeded drinking-water standards, though 7 of the 30 compounds detected
do not have drinking-water standards and 13 do not have aquatic guidelines.
-
Pesticide
concentrations had seasonal patterns, with the highest concentrations
measured in the spring following application.
Nutrients (Total
phosphorus and nitrate [as nitrogen], sampled in water)
-
Nitrate
concentrations did not exceed drinking-water standards in any streams
sampled.
-
Average
total phosphorus concentrations in four streams were above the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) recommended goal to prevent
nuisance aquatic growth.
-
The
South Fork Catawba River had an average total phosphorus concentration
that was four times higher than the USEPA goal and is a significant
source of phosphorus to downstream lakes.
-
Wastewater
discharge and agricultural runoff are major sources of nitrogen and
phosphorus.
Trace
Elements (Arsenic, mercury, and metals, sampled in sediment)
- Trace metals were detected
frequently in bed sediment and tissue, mostly at concentrations within
aquatic-life guidelines.
- Arsenic, chromium, and lead
exceeded guidelines in a few samples.
- Although concentrations
were not high in sediment samples, data suggest that mercury is accumulating
in fish and clams in concentrations that are harmful to humans or animals
that eat them.
- Sampling by State agencies
has resulted in fish-consumption advisories for mercury in 49 rivers
and reservoirs in South Carolina.
Organochlorines
(Organochorine compounds including DDT and PCB's, sampled in sediment)
- Organochlorine
pesticides were detected frequently in bed sediment and tissue.
- Most of
these compounds have been discontinued for use for many years but continue
to be detected because they are persistent in the environment.
- A derivative
of DDT was detected at concentrations exceeding aquatic-life standards
in sediment at three agricultural sites.
Volatile Organics
(Solvents, refrigerants, fumigants, and gasoline compounds, sampled in
water)
- Volatile
organic compounds (VOCs) known to occur in the aquifer adjacent to Gills
Creek, an urban stream in Columbia, S.C., were frequently detected in
the creek as well.
- Although
no existing Federal or State drinking-water standards or aquatic guidelines
were exceeded, this finding is consistent with the important influence
of ground-water quality on stream-water quality.
Bacteria
(Fecal coliform bacteria, sampled in water)
- Bacteria
levels frequently exceeded South Carolina standards for contact recreation
in streams in forested, urban, and agricultural areas.
- Standards
were exceeded more frequently in small streams than in large rivers.
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