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Baseline Assessment of Instream and Riparian Zone Biological Resources and the Establishment of Benchmark Stations on the Rio Grande in Big Bend National Park, Texas
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Contents
The Problem
Increased pollution, flow loss,
and the invasion of exotic species have degraded
the Rio Grande's aquatic resources in the Big
Bend region of Texas. Seven native fish species
have been extirpated. Of the remaining native
fish species, one is Federally endangered and
two are Federally listed as species of concern.
Aquatic invertebrates, essential to ecosystem
health, have not been assessed. No thorough mussel
survey has been done; five Rio Grande mussel species
have not been documented alive since the 1970's.
The effects of upstream diversions from the Rio
Grande on instream and riparian vegetation and
biological resources of the river in the Big Bend
National Park have not been established. The study
will provide Big Bend National Park with a comprehensive
assessment of the status of instream and riparian-zone
biological resources and produce the information
and tools needed by Park staff to address the
effects of continued low flows and water-quality
degradation of the Rio Grande through Big Bend
National Park.
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Objectives
* Provide Big Bend National
Park as well as policy makers, regulators, and
non-governmental organizations in Texas and Mexico
with baseline data and supporting interpretations
on the occurrence and distribution of instream
and riparian-zone biological resources of the
Rio Grande in reaches within and adjacent to Big
Bend National Park.
* Establish benchmark monitoring
stations on the Rio Grande in Big Bend National
Park to assess the status and trends of instream
and riparian-zone biological resources in relation
to differences in channel habitat, instream flow,
and water quality.
* Select one or more aquatic
and riparian indicator species and associated
instream habitat as ecosystem surrogates to use
in predictive modeling directed toward developing
an understanding of the effects of reduced instream
flows and related habitat loss, and water-quality
degradation on the stream ecosystem.
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Issues
Big Bend National Park administers
240 miles of the Rio Grande including the reach
downstream from the park designated the Rio Grande
Wild and Scenic River. The Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department administers 60 miles of the Rio Grande
and Big Bend State Park adjacent to and upstream
of the National Park. The Rio Grande represents
the Chihuahuan Desert's most extensive aquatic
and associated riparian environments.
Increased pollution and loss
of instream flow threaten floral and faunal populations
in the Big Bend area of the Rio Grande. The Rio
Grande is subject to increasing pollution from
upstream urban and agricultural sources in the
United States and Mexico. Increased industrialization
on both sides of the border upstream of Big Bend
National Park resulting from the North American
Free Trade Agreement has increased the discharge
of urban and industrial wastes and runoff into
the Rio Grande. Dams and diversions on the Rio
Grande have reduced the river to a vestige of
its historical flow. Mexico's Rio Conchos, the
primary Rio Grande tributary upstream of Big Bend,
has in recent decades contributed 85 percent of
the instream flow through Big Bend National Park,
Big Bend Ranch State Park, and the Rio Grande
Wild and Scenic River. However, the Rio Conchos
is rapidly being developed for water supply by
Mexico. Six dams are on the Rio Conchos and tributaries,
and more are planned.
Park managers are engaged
in local, regional, and international dialogues
to maintain and improve the ecological integrity
of the Rio Grande at Big Bend. The Texas Natural
Resources Conservation Commission, the International
Boundary and Water Commission, and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency have responsibility for water
quality and water flow in this region. Park managers
participate in working groups with these agencies
and the Border XXI Environmental Side Agreement
working group, a consortium of U.S. Federal agencies
formed to address environemntal issues associated
with the international boundary between the United
States and Mexico. National Park Service efforts
to obtain water quality and proposed flows necessary
to sustain park aquatic resources are fundamentally
thwarted without quantitative data regarding status
and needs of affected faunal groups and species.
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