Shenandoah Watershed Study-Virginia Trout Stream Sensitivity Study
(SWAS-VTSSS): stream water quality and hydrologic monitoring data for
mid-Appalachian headwater streams
Abstract
The Shenandoah Watershed Study (established in 1979) and the Virginia
Trout Stream Sensitivity Study (established in 1987) serve to increase
understanding of hydrological and biogeochemical changes in western
Virginia mountain streams that occur in response to acidic deposition
and other ecosystem stressors. The SWAS-VTSSS program has evolved over
its 40+ year history to consist of a temporally robust and spatially
stratified monitoring framework. Currently stream water is sampled
bi-hourly during high-flow events at 3 sites and weekly at 4 sites
within Shenandoah National Park (SHEN), and quarterly at 72 sites and on
an approximately decadal frequency at ~ 450 sites within
the wider western Virginia Appalachian region. Stream water is evaluated
for pH, acid neutralizing capacity (ANC), base cations (calcium,
magnesium, sodium and potassium ion), acid anions (sulfate, nitrate and
chloride), silica and ammonium, with a subset of samples evaluated for
monomeric aluminum and dissolved organic carbon. Hourly stream discharge
(4 sites) and in-situ measurements of conductivity, water and air
temperature (3 sites) are also measured within SHEN. Here we provide an
overview and timeline of the SWAS-VTSSS stream water monitoring program,
summarize the field and laboratory methods, describe the water chemistry
and hydrologic data sets, and document major watershed disturbances that
have occurred during the program history. Website links and instructions
are provided to access the stream chemistry and time-series monitoring
data in open-access federal databases. The purpose of this publication
is to promote awareness of these unique, long-term data sets for wider
use in catchment studies. The water chemistry and hydrologic data can be
used to investigate a wide range of biogeochemical research questions
and provide key inputs for models of these headwater stream ecosystems.
SWAS-VTSSS is an ongoing program and quality assured data sets are
uploaded to the databases annually.