U.S. Department of Agriculture: Agricultural Research Service, Lincoln, Nebraska

 

Date of this Version

2007

Comments

Produced by The Wildlife Society in partnership with NRCS and FSA (2007). Online at: http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/TECHNICAL/nri/ceap/fwresponse.html

Abstract

A major goal of both state and federal agricultural and environmental agencies in the United States is sustainable management of watersheds where agriculture is a dominant land use. Because watershed processes and conditions directly and indirectly affect soil, water, air, plants, animals, and humans, USDA NRCS encourages a watershed approach to management of agricultural operations in the United States. This requires a suite of approaches or practices that address natural resource concerns in uplands and stream corridors. Land clearing, leveling, draining, tilling, fertilizing, and harvesting together create prolonged perturbations manifested in the ecological and physical conditions of streams and rivers. Regardless of the cause of a problem in a watershed, its effect on aquatic habitats and their biological communities is dramatic. Physical damage due to channelization, erosion, sedimentation, and altered hydrological regimes coupled with ecological damage due to excessive nutrients, pesticide contamination, and riparian clearing cumulatively diminish the quality of aquatic habitats and threaten their biological communities. In general, the primary goals for farmers and ranchers in agricultural watersheds are (a) control of non-point source pollutants such as nutrients, sediments, and pesticides, (b) adequate water supplies for crop and animal production, and (c) stream/river channel stability. As indicators of watershed conditions, aquatic species and their habitats play a pivotal role in how we manage watersheds, with the ultimate goal of sustaining water quality and ecological integrity. Conservation planning identifies resource concerns within watersheds and what practices should be implemented to address them. If such practices are applied according to USDA standards, habitats will benefit as will the species that inhabit them. This paper examines the effects of NRCS-defined conservation practices used as conservation measures for aquatic species and their habitats.

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