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I&M Data Management MeetingLas Vegas, Nevada
March 12, 2002
Vital Signs Water Quality Data Management
STORET, Metadata, and the NPS Water Quality
Database Templates
by
Dean TuckerNPS Water Resources Division
NPS Vital Signs Monitoring Networks
STORET Background
EPA Database for Ambient
Water Quality and Biological
Data
STORET Background
STORage and RETrieval
Began in DOI in 1964
1 Million (plus) Sites
200 Million (plus) Observations
At a conservative $10.00 per obs. (field plus lab
work), data are worth $2 billion!!!
STORET Background
STORET Background
State Environmental & Health Organizations
Federal Agencies (EPA, NPS, BuRec, USFS)
Citizen Volunteers
Watershed Managers
STORET Background
New STORETSTORET
Legacy Data Center
OldSTORET
17 Two-Day Joint Application Design 1991-92 Links to GIS Data of Documented Quality
User Validation Four National Conferences, 1991-1996
Prototype Testing by 200 Users, 1997 Feedback Incorporated into System
STORET Background
Features Data of Documented Quality Graphical User Interface Data Standards for Data Sharing
Implementation Scaleable - Watershed to National
Locally Owned and Operated EPA Maintained
Public Read-Only Access to EPA Data Warehouse
STORET Background
NPSTORET
Programs
SamplingStations Projects
Trips
StationVisits
MonitoringActivities
Results
Data Loggers
Operating Periods
Organization
Simplified STORET Schematic
Sample Medium• Air• Bottom Sediment• Soil• Water • Biological
– Individual– Subject Taxa
– Tissue– Subject Taxa– Bio- Part
– Species Abundance• Aquatic Vegetation• Terrestrial Plants• Benthic Macroinverts• Birds• Reptiles• Amphibians• Bacteria/Viral• Phytoplankton/Zooplankton• Fish/Nekton
Medium
Intent
Community
STORET Background
Samples Routine Field Replicate Depletion Replicate Created from Sample Composite- with Parents Sample from Sample
Composite- W/O Parents Integrated Time Series Integrated Flow Proportioned Integrated Horizontal Profile Integrated Vertical Profile
Field Measurement/Observations• Replicate Measurement• Habitat Evaluation• Observation• Measurement
STORET Background
Why STORET? Under the Clean Water Act, states are
responsible for developing and enforcing water quality standards on all lands within their boundary.
Approximately 80% of states used legacy STORET.
Twenty-one states already have data in new STORET as of 3/05/2002.
States with Data in STORET National Data Warehouse as of 03/05/2002
VirginIslands
Why STORET?
Robust, full-featured, well-supported database
NPS runs its copy of STORET; EPA runs the National Data Warehouse
Public can access data at: http://www.epa.gov/storet
Why STORET?
Fully compliant with ITFM and NWQMC metadata recommendations
NPS-77 states that the NPS should provide water quality monitoring data to STORET
NPS has made a significant investment in old STORET with 2.5 million observations at 17,477 stations for 191 parks
Reporting Vital Signs NetworkWater Quality Data
Who: Why: When: What: How:
Every Vital Signs Network
Required by Implementation Plan
At Least Annually
NWQMC Metadata Elements
Access Templates
Terms Of ReferenceNational Water-Quality Monitoring Council
Approved by the Advisory Committee on Water Information February 18, 1998 Revisions approved by Council August 24, 2000.
Purpose, scope, applicability, and functionsPurpose -- The overall purpose of the National Council is to champion and support water-quality
information aspects of natural-resources management and environmental protection. The National Council has a broad mandate that encompasses water quality monitoring and assessment that includes considerations of water quality in relation to water quantity. The purpose of the National Council is to coordinate and provide guidance and technical support for the voluntary implementation of the recommendations presented in the Strategy for Improving Water-Quality Monitoring in the United States (the strategy) by government agencies and the private sector. The intent of the strategy, presented in the final report of the ITFM, is to stimulate the monitoring improvements needed to achieve comparable and scientifically defensible information on interpretations and evaluations of water-quality conditions.
(http://water.usgs.gov/wicp/acwi/monitoring)
Methods and Data Comparability Board (http://wi.water.usgs.gov/pmethods/index.html)
Chartered under the NWQMC Recommend monitoring approaches that
facilitate collaboration and yield comparable data and assessment results
Core set of data elements (metadata) for reporting water quality monitoring results
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
Track the:
Who:What:Where:When:Why:How:
of the monitoring effort
(http://wi.water.usgs.gov/pmethods/elements/elements.html)
Who?
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
Contact Information:
Data OwnerSample Collector, Measurer, or ObserverLab Analyzer
1.0 Contact
What?
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
What was measured/observed/analyzed?:
Analyte, Constituent, Parameter, Contaminant, Organism, Characteristic
Filtered Fraction, Sample Medium
Units, Field or Lab Measured
Chemical Abstract Service Number, Biological Systematic Identifier, ITIS Serial Number
2.0 Results
Where?
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
Locational Information for Sampleor Measurement/Observation:
Station ID
Name of Waterbody: (http://geonames.usgs.gov/gnishome.html)
Station Type (e.g. stream/river, canal, spring, estuary, etc.)
Latitude/Longitude Coordinates (datum, source, scale, accuracy)
Elevation (datum, source, scale, and units)
Bottom Depth of Station and Units
Geographic Data and Other Attributes
5.0 Location
When?
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
When was the sample collected/analyzedor measurement/observation made?:
Begin Date/End Date
Begin Time/End Time
Collection, Processing, and Analysis
4.0 Date/Time
Why?
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
Project Monitoring Purpose, Goals, Objectives
3.0 Reason for Sampling
Overall ProjectIndividual StationsIndividual Samples
reconnaissance/occurrence surveytrend analysispermit compliancestorm eventresearchregulatory benchmarkbioaccumulationdepositionother as applicable
How?
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
Sample Collection:
6.0 Sample Collection
Metadata Capstone:
Sample TypeField Measurement/Observation
SampleSample Created from SampleComposite Sample w/ ParentsQuality Control Sample
Media SampledSample TemperatureSample IdentificationSample Collection MethodSample Preservation/Treatment
How?
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
Sample Analysis:
7.0 Sample Analysis
Metadata Capstone:
Analytical Method NumberSample SizeSerial DilutionComposite SampleRun Batch(Spiking) Amount or Dose AddedDetection/Quantitation Limits, Types
NWQMC/MDCB Recommended StandardWater Quality Data Elements
Who What
Where
WhenWhy
How
RecommendedMinimum SetAs ApplicableChemical and Microbiological
Reporting Vital Signs NetworkWater Quality Data
Natural Resource Database Template Input Screens Projects - Why Stations - Where Metadata - How Results – What, When, Who
Transmit Files to WRD Along with QAPP, SOP, and Other Relevant Documentation
QA/QC and STORET Import Module (SIM) Upload to STORET National Data Warehouse
Useful Web Site References
STORET Web Site: http://www.epa.gov/storet.
NWQMC Water Quality Data Elements: http://wi.water.usgs.gov/pmethods/elements/elements.html.
National Water Quality Monitoring Council: http://water.usgs.gov/wicp/acwi/monitoring.
Natural Resource Database Template: http://www.nature.nps.gov/im/apps/template.
I&M Data Management MeetingLas Vegas, Nevada
March 12, 2002
Vital Signs Water Quality Data Management
STORET, Metadata, and the NPS Water Quality
Database Templates
by
Dean TuckerNPS Water Resources Division