Maryland Western Tributaries
Stratum Summary
Benthic community impairment in the upper western tributaries of the Bay
was high in 2003, with 60% of the area exhibiting degraded condition. The
severity of degradation was particularly high in 1996 and 2002 (high
percentage of severely degraded condition; no sites classified by the
B-IBI as "marginal"). The western tributaries suffer from various types
of pollution, including toxic contamination, low dissolved oxygen, excess
phytoplankton growth, lack of water clarity, and nutrient runoff. These
factors vary greatly among systems and the stress to the benthic community
varies accordingly. No clear trend in the estimates of areal degradation
were observed during the 1995-2003 time series (chart below).
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Click on drainage area
to see basin details.
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The sampling areas in the Maryland Western Tributaries stratum fall into three
basins, referred to as the Upper Western Shore
Basin (yellow shading on map above), the
Patapsco/Back Basin (raspberry shading), and
the Lower Western Shore Basin (green
shading). There are
further details at the basin level which the Benthic Program provides to
summarize benthic community condition for the basin Tributary
Teams. Tributary Teams consider basin summaries that synthesize
monitoring information from several sources, including watershed, ambient
water quality, habitat, and living resources components. This information
is linked to nutrient and sediment pollution sources and is intended to provide
the Tributary Teams with resources to consult in setting Tributary Strategy Goals.
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