Watershed - Des Plaines River (FX01)
Des Plaines River Watershed

Details

The Wisconsin portion of the Des Plaines River Watershed covers 133 square miles, and lies mainly in Kenosha County, with a small portion in Racine County. Portions of the City of Kenosha and the Villages of Paddock Lake, Pleasant Prairie and Union Grove lie within the watershed. An additional 6.4 square miles of the watershed is located in Illinois. There are approximately 85 miles of perennial streams in the watershed. There are no streams listed on the state's 303(d) list. Due to heavy agricultural land use, some stream reaches in this basin are affected by increased nutrient loads, increased sediment loads, drain tile impacts and historic ditching. Since pre-settlement times, many of the wetland areas have been filled or tiled to provide for more agriculture. Some areas of this basin still contain pirate perch, which are relatively rare in the state and historically found in this watershed. At 154 acres, Lake Shangrila-Benet is the largest of the lakes in the watershed. George, Montgomery and Paddock Lakes have participants in the Self Help Lake Monitoring Program. No Outstanding or Exceptional Resource Waters or Trout streams are listed for the watershed; nor are there any impaired streams or lakes.

Date  2012

Population, Land Use

About 111 square miles of the watershed, or about 83 percent of the total area of the watershed, was still in rural uses in 2000, with agriculture and pasture lands occupying about 84 square miles, or about 63.3 percent of the total watershed area. The remaining portion of the rural landscape of the watershed was made up by wetlands (8.6 percent of watershed), woodlands (5.4 percent), surface water (1.5 percent) and other rural open lands (4.5 percent). In 2000, urban land uses occupied about 22 square miles, or about 16.8 percent of the total area of the watershed. Residential land use accounted for over eight square miles, or about 6.2 percent of the total watershed area. Also of significance was the motor vehicle related portion of the transportation land use category, which accounted for over five square miles, or about 3.9 percent of the total watershed area. Other notable urban land uses within the watershed include the remaining transportation land uses (1.7 percent), recreational land (1.2 percent), and other urban open lands (2.1 percent).

Date  2011

Nonpoint and Point Sources

The Des Plaines River Watershed is listed as a high priority overall for non-point source (NPS) pollution due to high rankings for stream, lake, and groundwater NPS pollution. Lake Shangri-La, George Lake, and Paddock Lake have all received NPS rankings of high for the watershed.

Date  2011

Ecological Landscapes for Des Plaines River Watershed

Ecological Landscapes

The Southern Lake Michigan Coastal Ecological Landscape is located in the southeastern corner of Wisconsin along Lake Michigan. The landforms in this Ecological Landscape are characteristic of glacial lake influence, with ridge and swale topography, clay bluffs, and lake plain along Lake Michigan. Further inland, ground moraine is the dominant landform. Soils typically have a silt-loam surface overlying loamy and clayey tills. The historic vegetation in the northern part of this Ecological Landscape was dominated by sugar maple-basswood-beech forests with some oak while the southern part was dominated by oak forest, oak savanna and prairies. Wet, wet-mesic, and lake plain prairies were common in this area. Black ash and relict cedar and tamarack swamps were found in this Ecological Landscape. Today, most of the area is dominated by dairy and cash grain agriculture and intense urban development. Only about 8% of the Ecological Landscape is forested. Maple-beech forests are about half of the remaining forest types with the remainder split equally between oak-hickory and lowland hardwood forest types. There are some areas of wet-mesic and wet prairie but only small preserves remain since the landscape is heavily disturbed and fragmented. Because of this isolation, fragmentation, and high level of disturbance, non-native plants are abundant. Existing Woodlands According to year 2000 land use classifications, woodlands in the Des Plaines River watershed cover about 7.2 square miles, or about 5.4 percent of the total area of the watershed. Distributed in small stands throughout the watershed, these woodlands provide an attractive natural resource of immeasurable value. These woodlands accentuate the beauty of the stream system and the topography of the watershed and are essential to the maintenance of the overall quality of the environment in the watershed. A demand for the conversion to urban uses of the remaining woodland areas within the watershed may be expected, especially for residential development. Real estate interests tend to acquire scenic woodland areas for such development, and this trend may be expected to accelerate. Severe damage to woodland areas has resulted where developers have subdivided woodland tracts into small urban lots and removed trees to develop subdivisions. Remaining trees are often seriously weakened through the loss of a large portion of the root system or compaction of the soils beneath the tree canopy. It is important to note that woodlands can be substantially preserved during land subdivision through careful construction practices and good subdivision layout and design. However, in the absence of good planning and plan implementation, there is no guarantee that such preservation will take place. The overall quality of life within the watershed will be greatly influenced by the quality of the environment, as measured in terms of clean air, clean water, scenic beauty, and natural diversity. Woodlands contribute to clean air and water and to the maintenance of a diversity of plant and animal life in association with human life. The existing woodlands of the watershed, which required a century or more to develop, can be destroyed through mismanagement within a comparatively short period of time. Accordingly, careful attention should be given in the urban planning and development process to the preservation and proper management of the remaining woodlands of the Des Plaines River watershed as an important element of the natural resource base. State Wildlife and Recreation Areas Richard Bong State Recreation Area Once designated to be a jet fighter base, Richard Bong State Recreation Area is fittingly named after Major Richard I. Bong, a Poplar, Wisconsin, native who was America’s leading air ace during World War II. The project was abandoned three days before concrete was to be poured for a 12,500-foot runway. Local citizens had the foresight to protect this open space for future generations. In 1974, the state bought the land and it became the state’s first recreation area. The recreation area encompasses 4,515 acres of rolling grassland, savanna, wetlands, and scattered woodland. Most of it is in Wisconsin’s Southern Lake Michigan Coastal Ecological Landscape; a bit at the western edge is in the Southeast Glacial Plains. Spring is a transition time at the recreation area and is the premier birding time. The earliest migrants, red-winged blackbirds, show up the end of February, but new winged visitors arrive throughout the spring: grackles, cowbirds, meadowlarks, killdeer, snipe, bluebirds, ducks, and swallows, each one in progression. Ducks and geese begin to nest in the area’s wetlands in March and April, and warblers pass through in May. Yellow-headed blackbirds, bobolink, and upland plovers are among the uncommon species seen here. Spring is also the time when the air is filled with song -- chorus frogs, coyotes, song sparrows, cardinals, snipe, and others. The first green appears as the new leaves of spring wildflower show themselves. It’s a great time to bring the binoculars and hike the trails in search of the first signs of spring. It’s often windy, so it is a great place to bring a kite, with plenty of open space to fly it. In the summer, the recreation area offers swimming at a sand beach, fishing, and picnicking at four different picnic areas. There are horseshoe and volleyball courts and a ball diamond. Skiing, sledding, and ice fishing are favorite winter sports. A recreation area differs from a state park or forest in that it offers additional activities not traditionally found in state parks. Appropriate to its name, Richard Bong SRA offers an area where visitors may fly model airplanes, rockets, hang gliders, and hot air balloons. Richard Bong also has space to train both hunting and sled dogs, train falcons, ride all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) and horses on trails, and hunt in season. All such activities take place in the special use zone or managed hunt areas. Natural Areas and Critical Species Habitat Sites An amendment to the regional natural areas and critical species habitat protection and management plan for Southeastern Wisconsin was completed by SEWRPC in 2010. The plan seeks to identify and protect what remains of the landscape of the region as it existed pre-European settlement. The plan also seeks to identify and protect other areas found to be vital to the maintenance of endangered, threatened, and rare plant and animal species. Both plan objectives foster biodiversity in the Region. Under the plan, natural areas are defined as tracts of land or water so little modified by human activity, or which have sufficiently recovered from the effects of such activity, that they contain intact native plant and animal communities believed to be representative of the pre-European-settlement landscape. Critical species habitats are defined as additional tracts of land or water which support endangered, threatened, or rare plant or animal species. Natural areas, totaling 1,650 acres, were identified in the Des Plaines watershed. One six-acre natural area is protected under public ownership and one 27-acre natural area is protected under a private conservation ownership; two natural areas, totaling 418 acres, are protected under partial public and private ownership; one 413-acre natural area is protected under partial private, partial public, and partial private conservation ownership; and 15 natural areas, totaling 786 acres, are completely under unprotected private ownership. The 20 natural areas were identified, ranked according to their quality, and classified into one of the following three categories: 1. NA-1 Areas NA-1 areas are native biotic communities of statewide significance that contain excellent examples of nearly complete and relatively undisturbed plant and animal communities that are believed to closely resemble those present during pre-European settlement times. 2. NA-2 Areas NA-2 areas are native biotic communities that are judged to be of lower than NA-1 significance, perhaps on a county or regional basis. These areas are probably so designated because of evidence of a limited amount of human disturbance. They may also be of a high biotic quality, but of less than the minimum size necessary for an NA-1 ranking. In the future, some NA-2 sites may become of higher significance because of recovery from past disturbance, because of a sudden substantial decrease in the acreage of a once-common type, or after a more detailed inventory. 3. NA-3 Areas NA-3 areas are native biotic communities substantially altered by human activities, but yet of local natural area significance. These sites often contain excellent wildlife habitat and also provide refuge for a large number of native plant species that no longer exist in the surrounding region because of land use activities. Specifically, the classification of an area into one of the foregoing categories is based upon consideration of the diversity of plant and animal species and community types present; the expected structure and integrity of the native plant or animal community; the extent of disturbance from human activities, such as logging, grazing, water-level changes, and pollution; the commonness of the plant and animal communities present; any unique natural features within the area; and the size of the area. One natural area within the Des Plaines River watershed was ranked NA-1; eight natural areas were ranked NA-2; and 11 natural areas were ranked NA-3. The total of 1,650 acres included within designated natural areas represents about 2 percent of the watershed. Seven critical species habitat sites, totaling 1,522 acres, were identified within the Des Plaines watershed. Four of these sites, totaling 1,438 acres, are under public ownership, and three sites, totaling 84 acres, are under private ownership. Environmental Corridors SEWRPC has mapped the key elements of the natural resource base of the Southeastern Wisconsin Region, including lakes, streams, wetlands, woodlands, wildlife habitat areas, areas of rugged terrain, wet and poorly drained soils, and remnant prairies. In addition, SEWRPC has mapped such natural resource-related features as existing and potential park sites, sites of historic and archaeological value, areas possessing scenic vistas or viewpoints, and areas of scientific value. These inventories have resulted in the delineation of “environmental corridors,” which are broadly defined as linear areas in the landscape containing concentrations of these significant natural resource and resource-related features. More information on environmental corridors can be found on SEWRPC’s website at http://www.sewrpc.org/SEWRPC/LandUse/EnvironmentalCorridors.htm. The preservation of environmental corridors in essentially natural, open uses has many benefits, including flood-flow attenuation and water pollution abatement. Corridor preservation is important to the movement of wildlife and for the movement and dispersal of seeds for a variety of plant species.

Date  2012

Hydrologic Features

The Des Plaines River watershed may be considered as a composite of eight subwatersheds: 1) the Upper Des Plaines River subwatershed, 2) the Lower Des Plaines River subwatershed, 3) the Brighton Creek subwatershed, 4) the Center Creek subwatershed, 5) the Dutch Gap Canal subwatershed, 6) the Jerome Creek subwatershed, 7) the Kilbourn Road Ditch subwatershed, and 8) the Salem Branch of Brighton Creek subwatershed. For the hydrologic analyses performed, the watershed was divided into approximately 230 subbasins, ranging in size from 0.02 to 2.81 square miles, and having an average area of 0.61 square mile. The surface-water resources of the Des Plaines River watershed consist of lakes, streams, and ponds. There are 18 lakes and ponds greater than two acres in area within the watershed, of which only six lakes are greater than 50 acres in area and are capable of supporting a variety of recreational uses. The total surface area of these six lakes is 635 acres, or less than 1 percent of the total watershed area. Ponds and other surface waters are present in even smaller proportions, totaling only 169 acres in area within the watershed. These lakes and smaller bodies of water provide residents of the watershed and persons from outside the watershed with a variety of aesthetic and recreational opportunities and also serve to stimulate the local economy by attracting recreational users. Precipitation is the primary source of all water in the Des Plaines River watershed. Part of the precipitation runs directly off the land surface into stream channels and is ultimately discharged from the watershed; part is temporarily retained in snow packs, ponds, and depressions in the soil or on vegetation, and is subsequently transpired or evaporated; while the remainder is retained in the soil or passed through the soil into a zone of saturation or groundwater reservoir. Some water is retained in the groundwater system; but in the absence of groundwater development, much eventually returns to the surface through conveyance in agricultural drain tile systems or as seepage or spring discharge into ponds and surface channels. This discharge constitutes the entire natural flow of surface streams in the Des Plaines River watershed during extended periods of dry weather. With the exception of the groundwater in the deep sandstone aquifer underlying the watershed, all of the water on the land surface and underlying the Des Plaines River basin generally remains an active part of the hydrologic system. In the deep aquifer, water is held in storage beneath the nearly impermeable water-tight Maquoketa shale formation and is, therefore, taken into the hydrologic cycle in only a very limited way. Since the recharge area of the deep aquifer lies entirely west of the Des Plaines River watershed, artificial movement through wells and minor amounts of leakage through the shale beds provide the only connection between this water and the surface water and shallow groundwater resources of the watershed. Hydrologic Budget Water in the deep sandstone aquifer under the Des Plaines watershed is taken into the hydrologic cycle in only a very limited way because there is little seepage through the relatively impermeable overlying Maquoketa shale. Because of this fact, a hydrologic budget for the Des Plaines River watershed can be developed considering only the surface and shallow groundwater supplies. In its simplest form, then, the long-term hydrologic budget for the Des Plaines River watershed may be expressed by the equation: ET = P - R where evaporation and transpiration have been combined into one variable, ET, denoting evapotranspiration, and where net groundwater flow out of the watershed has been assumed to be zero, as has the net change in the total surface and groundwater stored within the watershed. Because of seasonal variations in the behavior of the phases of the hydrologic cycle, this simplified equation is generally not valid for time durations of less than a year. Based upon records from 1940 through 1993, the average annual precipitation over the watershed is 32.6 inches. Streamflow records collected from October 1, 1966, through September 30, 1994, at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) gaging station on the Des Plaines River at Russell, Illinois (Station Number 05527800) located just downstream of the Wisconsin-Illinois state line, indicate that the average annual discharge at that location is about 98.4 cubic feet per second (cfs), equivalent to 10.1 inches of water spread uniformly over the land surface of the watershed upstream from the gaging station. Substitution of these values for precipitation (P) and runoff R) into the simplified hydrologic budget equation indicates an average annual evapotranspiration of 22.5 inches. Therefore, on an average annual water-year basis, about 69 percent of the precipitation that falls on the Des Plaines River watershed is returned to the atmosphere by the evapotranspiration process, while the remaining 31 percent leaves the watershed as streamflow. Seasonal Distribution of Peak Stages Flood stages recorded at the U.S. Geological Survey Russell, Illinois gaging station on the Des Plaines River were used to evaluate the seasonal distribution of annual flood peaks. The seasonal distribution of the recorded peak discharges indicates that, over a 35-year record for the station as either a crest-stage or continuous recording gage, the occurrence of high water events was not limited to any one season. The lack of occurrence of annual peaks in the months of November, December and January is typical of watersheds in Southeastern Wisconsin. In the years from 1960 through 1994, the months of February, March, and April were the most active flood runoff periods in the Des Plaines River watershed, with 77 percent of the recorded annual peaks having occurred in these months. The period February through April is a high runoff period in the watershed because of the effects of snow accumulation and frozen ground in February and March, and the effects of snowmelt and rainfall on near-saturated soils in March and April when the drying effects of transpiration are still minimal and when air and surface temperatures still inhibit evaporation.

Date  2012

Fisheries

In the 150 years of human activity which have reshaped the landscape along the Des Plaines River, portions of the River and some tributaries have been transformed from natural, meandering streams with a variety of habitats to modified, channelized streams with uniform conditions. The fishery of the stream system has responded to these habitat changes primarily through a loss of overall diversity and particularly through a loss of species intolerant of the degraded water-quality conditions. Earliest fish records for the Des Plaines River came from two sites where collections were made in 1906 and 1928. Twenty-five species were found at these two stations, making an average of 12.5 species per station. Six of the 25 species were known to be intolerant of polluted conditions. Very intensive fish surveys carried out in 1979 and 1980 produced a total of 36 species at 39 stations, with five intolerant, 18 tolerant, and 13 very tolerant species. The average number of different species per station was slightly less than one. The 1994 survey yielded 30 species at 26 stations, with two intolerant, 16 tolerant, and 12 very tolerant species averaging slightly more than one species per station. No carp were found in either the 1906 or 1928 collection but were plentiful in recent decades. The Des Plaines River clearly lacks the complement of fish normally occurring in natural waters. This loss of diversity and of intolerant species is due to a combination of factors: 1. The draining and filling of wetlands adjacent to the stream system, which has resulted in a loss of fish spawning, nursery, and feeding areas. 2. The ditching and realignment of stream channels, which has resulted in a uniform aquatic environment where there was once a great heterogeneity in the form of alternating riffles, pools, and runs. This ditching and realignment of the stream channels has resulted in uniform bottom types and water velocities which limit the types of fish that can normally inhabit a stream system and has thereby reduced the natural diversity. 3. Runoff from agricultural lands and construction sites, which transports sediment into the stream system, filling pools, covering gravel beds and plants, clogging the gills of fish and other aquatic animals, increasing turbidity, interfering with the mating and feeding behavior of fish, and, through abrasive action, sometimes injuring fish. 4. Fluctuations of water flow, which create alternating scouring and stagnant conditions within the stream system. Under low-flow conditions, fish become concentrated in shallow isolated pools where they are placed under great stress for lack of oxygen, food, and shelter. If these pools remain isolated into winter, they can freeze, killing all inhabitants. Since these pools may contain the entire breeding stock of a reach of stream, the future fishery is threatened when the fish in the pools are placed under stress or killed. 5. Runoff waters containing pesticides and fertilizers from urban and rural lands, sewage-treatment plant effluent, industrial discharges, and chemical spills, which have caused a decline in water-quality conditions. 6. The lack of instream vegetation and cover, which has prevented fish from finding shelter from predators and sudden floods. Some fish species may not carry on normal reproductive activities without proper cover. In addition, the lack of vegetative cover for other aquatic organisms may reduce the food resources available to fish, thereby affecting their growth and reproductive capacity. As a result of these problems, the fish population of the Des Plaines River watershed has reached a point where the natural source of “seed stock” necessary to restore the depopulated areas of the watershed is apparently lacking. Very tolerant fish, such as black bullhead and carp, do well in the stream system; but intolerant species, such as certain shiners and daces, are lacking. Even such tolerant species as largemouth bass, northern pike, and bluegills would be more abundant in the Des Plaines River watershed if a balanced fishery were present.

Date  2011

Des Plaines River Watershed At-a-Glance

Impaired Water in Des Plaines River Watershed
River and Stream QualityAll Waters in Watershed

According to the WDNR’s Register of Waterbodies (ROW) database, there are over 225 miles of streams and rivers in the Des Plaines River Watershed; 217 miles of which have been entered into the WDNR’s assessment database. Of these 217 miles, approximately 22% are meeting Fish and Aquatic Life uses and are specified as in “good” condition. The condition of the remaining stream miles is not known or documented. Additional uses for which the waters are evaluated include Fish Consumption, General Uses, Public Health and Welfare, and Recreation. These uses have not been directly assessed for the watershed. However, a general fish consumption advisory for potential presence of mercury is in place for all waters of the state. One of the most interesting, variable, and, occasionally, unpredictable features of the watershed is its stream system, with its ever-changing, sometimes widely fluctuating, discharges and stages. The stream system of the watershed receives a relatively uniform flow of water from the shallow groundwater reservoir underlying the watershed. This groundwater discharge constitutes the base flow of the streams. Agricultural drain tiles also contribute to this base flow. The streams also periodically receive surface-water runoff from rainfall and snowmelt. This runoff, superimposed on the base flow, sometimes causes the streams to leave their channels and occupy the adjacent floodplains. Perennial streams are here defined as those streams which maintain at least a small continuous flow throughout the year except under unusual drought conditions. Intermittent streams are those streams which do not maintain a continuous flow throughout the year in any case other than the exception noted in the above definition of perennial streams. There are 69.1 miles of perennial streams within the watershed. Des Plaines River 2011 The source of the Des Plaines River is in the southwest one-quarter of U.S. Public Land Survey Section 33, Township 3 North, Range 21 East, in the Town of Yorkville, just north of the Racine-Kenosha county line and about 0.75 mile east of the Village of Union Grove. From its source, the River flows in a generally southerly direction for approximately 12.2 miles, to about the center of Section 16, Township 1 North, Range 21 East, in the Town of Bristol; then easterly for about four miles, to its confluence with the Kilbourn Road Ditch just east of IH 94-USH 41 in the Village of Pleasant Prairie; and finally southerly for approximately 5.6 miles, to the Wisconsin-Illinois state line. The River has a perennial stream length of about 20.5 miles. The river has also been found to be a wadable nursery water for smallmouth bass. Salem Branch 2011 Salem Branch is a two-mile-long stream that fl ows out from Hooker Lake and discharges into Brighton Creek near the Village of Paddock Lake. It was last monitored in 2007 and the current use is listed as Fish and Aquatic Life with an attainable use as a warm water sport fishery. Jerome Creek 2011 The origin of Jerome Creek is in the northeast one-quarter of Section 22, Township 1 North, Range 22 East, in the Village of Pleasant Prairie, just south of 93rd Street. The entire length of the Creek is in the Village of Pleasant Prairie. From its origin, the Creek flows about 0.7 mile in a generally northerly direction; then westerly for about 1.9 miles, crossing STH 31 and the Union Pacific Railroad line; then southwesterly for about two miles, to its confluence with the Des Plaines River one-quarter mile north of Kenosha County CTH Q. The Creek has a perennial stream length of about 1.7 miles. Kilbourn Road Ditch 2011 The source of Kilbourn Road Ditch is located about one-half mile east of IH 94-USH 41 in the southwest one quarter of Section 30, Township 3 North, Range 22 East, Town of Mt. Pleasant, Racine County. From there, the stream flows southerly along IH 94-USH 41 for about 12.6 miles, to its confluence with the Des Plaines River in the southwest one-quarter of Section 7, Township 1 North, Range 22 East, in the Village of Pleasant Prairie. The entire length of the stream is classified as perennial. Center Creek 2011 Center Creek, also known as Root River, has its origin on the one-quarter section line between the northeast and northwest one-quarters of Section 15, Township 2 North, Range 21 East, Town of Paris. From its origin it flows southerly for about 5.5 miles, to STH 50; then southeasterly for about two miles, to its confluence with the Des Plaines River, just west of IH 94-USH 41 in the southeast one-quarter of Section 12, Township 1 North, Range 21 East, Town of Bristol. The Creek has a perennial stream length of about 5.6 miles. Brighton Creek 2011 The origin of Brighton Creek is in the northeast one-quarter of Section 14, Township 2 North, Range 20 East, Town of Brighton. From its origin, the Creek flows about six miles in a generally southerly direction, to its confluence with the Salem Branch of Brighton Creek in the southwest one-quarter of Section 6, Township 1 North, Range 21 East, Town of Bristol; then about three miles in a generally northeasterly direction, to its confluence with the Des Plaines River in the southwest one-quarter of Section 33, Township 2 North, Range 21 East. Brighton Creek has a perennial stream length of about nine miles. Dutch Gap Canal 2011 The Dutch Gap Canal, which originates in the northeast one-quarter of Section 20, Township 1 North, Range 21 East, Town of Bristol, has a perennial stream length of 4.1 miles. The Canal flows in a generally southerly direction into Lake County, Illinois, where it is known as North Mill Creek and, farther downstream, as Mill Creek.

Date  2012

Watershed Trout Streams
Watershed Outstanding & Exceptional Resources

Lakes and Impoundments

The WDNR’s ROW database shows that there are over 313 acres of reservoirs and flowages and almost 837 acres of lakes, ponds, and other unspecifi ed open water in the Des Plaines River Watershed. Of these, approximately 1172 lake acres are entered into the state’s assessment database. Forty-three percent of these waters are indicated as supporting Fish and Aquatic Life use. A total of 667 acres have not been assessed for Fish and Aquatic Life use. Named lakes in the Des Plaines River Watershed include Lake Andrea, Paddock Lake, Hooker Lake, Lake Shangri-La, George Lake, Paasch Lake, River Oaks Lake, Mud Lake, Friendship Lake, Mud Turtle Pond, Bullfrog Pond, and Bass Pond. Reservoirs and flowages in the watershed include Benet Lake, East Lake Flowage (Vern Wolf Lake) Montgomery Lake, League Lake, Juniper Lake, Paulin Pond, Bur Oak Lake, Pleasant Lake, and Barber Pond. The following water narratives summarize the most recent information available for the main lakes and flowages in the watershed. Bur Oak Lake 2/1/82 This small, warm water impoundment is in Brightondale County Park. Water levels are controlled by a drop inlet control structure that can maintain a head of up to eight feet. Critical dissolved oxygen levels are reached in mid-winter and mid-summer. Fish species known to be present include bullheads, golden shiners, green sunfish, and fathead minnows. All of these have the ability to withstand low oxygen levels. Dense aquatic vegetation could also limit fish species. The lake provides wildlife habitat for waterfowl, shorebirds, and furbearers. Except for a state highway along its east side, it lies wholly within the county park and public access is available from there (Source: 1982, Surface Water Resources of Kenosha County Bur Oak Lake, T2N, R20E, Section 10, Surface Area 5.0 acres, Maximum Depth = 11.0 ft, Secchi disk = 1.0 ft). Friendship Lake 2/1/82 This small, warm water drainage and seepage lake near the headwaters of Brighton Creek shows evidence of a large carp population that is causing extreme turbidity and reducing aquatic vegetation growth. The lake was chemically treated in 1963 under a private management permit to remove stunted bullheads, and then restocked with largemouth bass. It winterkilled in 1978. Fish species noted by a local landowner were northern pike, carp, and bullheads. Turbidity has reduced its habitat value for waterfowl and may also hinder the production of desirable fish. Recent surveys indicate that about half of its volume approaches critical levels of dissolved oxygen in mid-summer and winter. About 38 acres of wetland border the lake and provide excellent habitat for furbearers. Friendship Lake has an inlet and an outlet which flow ephemerally, usually in early spring each year. There is no public access except by navigating up its outlet from a state highway crossing (Source: 1982, Surface Water Resources of Kenosha County Friendship Lake, (Mud) T2N, R20E, Section 11, 12 Surface Acres = 11, Maximum Depth = 10.0 ft, Secchi disc = 1.0 ft.). George Lake 2011 George Lake is located in the Town of Bristol in south central Kenosha County. Portions of the Towns of Bristol and Salem lie within the area tributary to George Lake. George Lake is a drained lake, having no continuously flowing inlet but with a flowing outlet, and, as such, is not primarily groundwater-fed but relies on precipitation and direct drainage from the surrounding land as the principal sources of its water. The mean depth of the Lake is about seven feet and the maximum depth is about 16 feet. George Lake has a volume of approximately 390 acre-feet, and a surface area of about 59 acres The tributary area draining to the Lake is about 2,187 acres. Although it is a drained lake, it does have two intermittent inlets, both draining lands located to the west of the Lake and USH 45 in the Towns of Bristol and Salem: the first, located along the western shore of the Lake, drains a marsh and lowland area; the second, located along the southwestern shore of the Lake, drains a large marsh complex. George Lake is drained through an outlet located at the northeastern corner of the Lake that connects by way of a small unnamed stream to the Dutch Gap Canal, a tributary to the Des Plaines River. Water levels in George Lake are maintained by a small impoundment located at this outlet. The Wisconsin Trophic State Index rating, as calculated from data taken by the Citizen Lake Volunteer Monitor on George Lake, classifies the lake as eutrophic. George Lake supports a healthy and diverse aquatic plant community, with up to 11 different species of submerged aquatic plants within the lake. Of these species, two are considered invasive – Eurasian Water milfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum), and Curly-leaf pondweed (Potamogeton crispus). Measures to control these invasive plants are conducted every year by the George Lake Rehabilitation District. These measures include herbicide and mechanical control. George Lake supports a relatively large and diverse fish community. WDNR manages George Lake as a bass-panfish warmwater fishery. Fish surveys show Bluegill, Yellow perch, Pumpkinseed, Walleye, Largemouth bass, Carp, Northern Pike, White sucker, bullhead, Rock bass, crappie, and others. Hooker Lake 2011 Hooker Lake is an 87-acre lake located in the Town of Salem in Kenosha County, and drains to the Salem Branch of Brighton Creek. The Wisconsin Trophic State Index, as calculated from data taken by the Citizen Lake Volunteer Monitor on Paddock Lake, classifies the lake as slightly eutrophic. Hooker Lake supports a healthy and diverse aquatic plant community, though invasives such as Curly-leaf pondweed and Eurasian Watermilfoil are present. Measures to control the invasive plants, principally herbicidal control for EWM, are sponsored annually by the Hooker Lake Management District. Largemouth bass, Northern pike, Walleye and panfish are present in the lake. DNR owned wetland on the northern side of the lake provides habitat for northern pike. Juniper Lake 2/1/82 This small impoundment in Brightondale County Park could be considered the headwaters of Brighton Creek. Its water level is controlled by a drop inlet control structure in the dam which maintains a head of 10 feet. Its intermittent outlet drains into Bur Oak Lake. It is managed for largemouth bass and panfish but since it is almost surrounded by a golf course, fishing is restricted during most of the open water season. Because of human activity, wildlife values are limited, but migrating waterfowl and shorebirds are common. Access is possible from Brightondale Park (Source: 1982, Surface Water Resources of Kenosha County Juniper Lake, T2N, R20E, Section 3, 6 Surface Acres = 12, Maximum Depth = 20 ft, Secchi disc = 7.0 ft). Lake Andrea 2011 Lake Andrea is a former quarry in the Village of Pleasant Prairie, and is maintained as a public park and is intended for recreational use. The lake is 121 acres. Lake Shangri-La (Benet Lake) 2011 Lake Shangrila and Benet Lake are located in the Towns of Bristol and Salem, Kenosha County, Wisconsin. A small portion of Benet Lake is located in the Town of Antioch in Lake County, Illinios. As a whole, the Shangrila-Benet Lake system has a surface area of 154 acres, a total volume of 748 acre-feet and a shoreline approximately 6.2 miles in total length. As a drained lake system, there is no inlet, but there is a more-or-less continuously flowing outlet, relying primarily on precipitation and runoff from the tributary area to supply the Lakes with water. Additional water inflow to the Lakes may be occurring from springs reported by residents to be present in the Lakes’ basins and from intermittent streams located along the southern and southwestern shoreline areas of Benet Lake that appear to transport snowmelt and surface runoff into the Lakes. Water flowing out of the system exits through a timber stop log spillway, which has a 13.2-foot-long crest, and which discharges to four 24-inch-diameter pipes set in an earthen dam, which was originally constructed in 1927 along the northeastern shore of Lake Shangrila. There is also a gated 24-inch-diameter corrugated metal pipe that can be used to provide additional hydraulic capacity. Outflowing water drains through a series of marshes and intermittent streams into the Dutch Gap Canal, a 4.1-mile-long waterway in Wisconsin which continues for about eight miles in Illinois where the waterway is called North Mill Creek. North Mill Creek then joins with Mill Creek, which flows another 4.5 miles to its confluence with the mainstem of the Des Plaines River near Wadsworth in Lake County, Illinois. The lake system today constitutes a heavily used, recreational water resource and residential community situated within easy reach of the Milwaukee metropolitan area, and is a popular destination for weekend recreational users, as well as year-round residents. Secchi-disk data for Lake Shangrila indicated a TSI of 69, while Secchi-disk data, and chlorophyll-a and total phosphorus concentrations for Benet Lake indicate a TSI of 67. Both values are consistent with eutrophic conditions. A value above 50 is generally indicative of the enriched conditions associated with eutrophic lakes. The aquatic plant communities observed during 2008 in the Lake Shangrila-Benet Lake system had limited biodiversity, with eight species recorded during the survey. any lakes in the Region have a dozen or more species of aquatic plants. In comparison with these lakes, the Lake Shangrila-Benet Lake system has an impoverished aquatic plant flora, which limits the ability of these lakes to sustain fish and aquatic life and associated human uses, especially given that two of the observed aquatic plant species are declared nuisance species identified in Chapter NR 109 of the Wisconsin Administrative Code. A reduced species diversity is consistent with the enriched trophic states of the Lakes. Lakes Shangri-la and Benet support a large and diverse fish community. Fish surveys report Bluegill, Yellow perch, Pumpkinseed, Walleye, Largemouth bass, Carp, Northern Pike, White sucker, bullhead, Rock bass, Channel catfish, and Black crappie. League Lake 2/1/82 This is a small warm water seepage lake lying wholly within lands owned by the Union League Foundation. Water levels are controlled somewhat by a low-head splashboard type structure on its outlet. The lake’s outlet flows only during the spring runoff or after periods of excessive rainfall. Softstem bulrushes, cattails, and white water lilies along its shoreline provide ideal resting and feeding habitat for fish, waterfowl, and furbearers. The land in the immediate watershed is woods, marsh, and open grass. Fish consist of largemouth bass, yellow perch, crappies, bluegills, and bullheads. There is no public access (Source: 1982, Surface Water Resources of Kenosha County League Lake, T2N, R20E, Section 35 Surface Acres = 14.4, Maximum Depth = 22.0 ft, Secchi disc = 3.0 ft). Montgomery Lake 2011 Montgomery Lake is a 46-acre lake, draining to the Salem Branch of Brighton Creek. This warm water seepage lake is part of the headwaters of Salem Branch and Brighton Creek. Its entire shoreline is bordered with cattail marsh, giving it exceptional value for wildlife. The marshlands also provide spawning habitat for game fish like northern pike. The general ecology of the lake depends on these marshlands. Unfortunately, its shallow depth and high percentage of organics make it subject to winterkill. Records indicate that a significant winterkill occurs at least once every 10 years. The Wisconsin Trophic State Index, as calculated from historical data taken by the Citizen Lake Volunteer Monitor on Montgomery Lake, classifies the lake as borderline mesotrophic/eutrophic. Aquatic plant diversity is very high on Montgomery Lake. Water clarity is very good, promoting a healthy population of native plants. While some aquatic invasives are present, they are not at significant enough density to warrant either mechanical or herbicidal control. Practically the entire shoreline is bordered by cattails, providing wildlife habitat and acting as a buffer to protect water quality. Principal fish in Montgomery Lake include Largemouth bass, crappies, perch, bluegills, and bullhead. Mud Lake 2/1/82 Although this small, cattail fringed lake is adjacent to a subdivision, there are no developments on its marshy shores. The predominant bottom type is muck and it is subject to winterkill when water levels are low and the winter severe. From past records, it can be expected to winterkill at least once every 10 years. Mud Lake receives drainage from a man-made lake to the southwest. Wetlands adjoin it on all sides, but the watershed is mostly cultivated agricultural land. The lake provides good habitat for waterfowl and furbearers, such as muskrats and raccoons. Waterfowl hunting is common. During high water periods, fish species migrate up from the Dutch Gap Canal to populate the lake. Northern pike, largemouth bass, and various panfish are normally present in the fishery. The lake is surrounded by private lands and there is no public access (Source: 1982, Surface Water Resources of Kenosha County Mud Lake, TlN, R21E, Section 32 Surface Acres = 22.0 ft. Maximum Depth = 15.0 ft, Secchi disc = 4 ft). Paasch Lake 2/1/82 This small, warm water seepage and drainage lake is almost completely bordered by cattail marsh. There is also a ring of white and yellow water lilies growing out to a depth of five feet. Winterkill is possible during severe winters. A large carp population causes extreme turbidity and gives the lake’s waters a mucky appearance. The lake has wildlife habitat value for waterfowl and marshland furbearers in the 56 acres of wetland that adjourn it. Presently, only three dwellings are located near the lake and there is no public access (Source: 1982, Surface Water Resources of Kenosha County Paasch Lake, TlN, R21E, Section 29, 30 Surface Acres = 21, Maximum Depth = 20 ft, Secchi disc = 2.5 ft). Paddock Lake 2011 Paddock Lake is a 112-acre lake located in the Village of Paddock Lake in Kenosha County. The lake drains to the Salem Branch of Brighton Creek. Maximum depth of the lake is 32 feet. The Wisconsin Trophic State Index, as calculated from data taken by the Citizen Lake Volunteer Monitor on Paddock Lake, classifies the lake as slightly eutrophic. Paddock Lake supports a healthy and diverse aquatic plant community, with over 23 species of submerged or emergent aquatic plants. Management of invasive plants and for navigation is done by a harvester program, operating under permit from WDNR. Largemouth bass, Northern pike, Perch, and panfish are present in the lake. Vern Wolf Lake 2011 Vern Wolf Lake (formerly East Lake Flowage) is a 123-acre lake located within the Bong State Recreational Area in the Town of Brighton in Kenosha County. The lake drains to Brighton Creek. The Wisconsin Trophic State Index, as calculated from data taken on Vern Wolf Lake, classifies the lake as slightly eutrophic. Aquatic plant diversity in the lake is good, with the lake supporting dense growth of aquatic plants. No management for aquatic plants takes place on the lake.

Date  2012

Wetland Health

Wetland Status: The Des Plaines River Watershed is located in Kenosha and Racine counties. Roughly six percent of the current land uses in the watershed are wetlands. About one-quarter of the original wetlands in the watershed are estimated to exist. Of these wetlands, the majority include forested wetlands (25%), and emergent wetlands (52%), which include marshes and wet meadows. Wetland Condition: Little is known about the condition of the remaining wetlands but estimates of reed canary grass (RCG) infestations, an opportunistic aquatic invasive wetland plant, into different wetland types has been estimated based on satellite imagery. This information shows that reed canary grass dominates 23% of the existing emergent wetlands, and 11% of the remaining forested wetlands. Reed Canary Grass domination inhibits successful establishment of native wetland species. Wetland Restorability: Of the 15,667 acres of estimated lost wetlands in the watershed, approximately 71% are considered potentially restorable based on modeled data, including soil types, land use and land cover (Chris Smith, DNR, 2009). Existing Wetlands Wetland vegetation typically includes sedges, rushes, cat tails, red-osier dogwoods, and willows. Wetlands within the Des Plaines River watershed include deep and shallow marshes, southern sedge meadows, fresh (wet) meadows, wet prairies, shrub-carrs, and southern wet to wet-mesic lowland hardwood acres. Based on SEWRPC’s year 2000 land use inventory, wetlands in the watershed currently cover about 11.4 square miles (8.6%) of the total area of the watershed Water and wetland areas probably constitute the most important landscape feature within the watershed and can serve to enhance all proximate uses. Their contribution to resource conservation and recreation within the watershed is immeasurable. Recognizing the desirable attributes of wetland areas, continued efforts should be made to protect this resource by discouraging wetland draining, filling, and conversion to incompatible agricultural and urban uses, all costly, both in monetary and environmental terms. Wetlands have an important set of common natural functions that make them ecologically and environmentally valuable resources. Wetlands affect the quality of water. Aquatic plants change such inorganic nutrients as phosphorus and nitrogen into organic material, storing it in their leaves or in peat, which is composed of plant remains. The stems, leaves, and roots of these plants also slow the flow of water through a wetland, allowing the silt and other sediment to settle out. Wetlands thus help to protect downstream water resources from siltation and pollution. Wetlands influence the quantity of water. They act to retain water during dry periods and to hold it back during wet weather, thereby stabilizing stream flows and controlling flooding. At a depth of 12 inches, an acre of marsh is capable of holding more than 325,000 gallons of water; it thus helps protect communities against flooding. Wetlands may serve as groundwater recharge and discharge areas.

Date  2012

Aquatic Invasive Species

Curly-leaf pondweed, Eurasian water-milfoil, rusty crayfish, and zebra mussel have all been verified and vouchered in Des Plaines River Watershed waterbodies. The table below summarizes the locations where these Aquatic Invasive Species have been observed and when their presence was first confirmed.

Date  2011

Fish Consumption Advice

No specific fish consumption advisories are issued for waterbodies within the Des Plaines River Watershed at this time. However, a general fish consumption advisory for potential presence of mercury is in place for all waters of the state.

Date  2011

Groundwater

The Des Plaines River watershed is richly endowed with groundwater resources. In the rural portions of the watershed, the domestic water supply is provided by the groundwater reservoir. Lake Michigan is the source of the public water supply provided to the City of Kenosha and Village of Pleasant Prairie. Rock units that yield water in usable amounts to pumped wells and in significant amounts to lakes and streams are called aquifers. The aquifers beneath the watershed differ widely in water-yield capabilities and extend to great depths, probably attaining a thickness in excess of 1,500 feet in portions of the watershed. There are three major aquifers underlying the Des Plaines River watershed. These are, in order from land surface downward, as follows: 1) the sand and gravel deposits in the glacial drift; 2) the Niagara aquifer, the shallow dolomite strata in the underlying bedrock; and 3) the Cambrian and Ordovician strata, composed of sandstone, dolomite, and shale. Because of their relative nearness to the land surface, the first two aquifers are sometimes called the “shallow aquifers” and the third aquifer, the “deep aquifer.” Wells tapping these aquifers are referred to as “shallow” or “deep” wells, respectively. Gradual discharge from the sand-and-gravel aquifer is the primary source of base flow to the Des Plaines River and the other streams and lakes in the watershed. Recharge to the sand-and-gravel aquifer occurs primarily through infiltration of precipitation that falls on the land surface directly overlying the aquifer. Within the watershed, the rate of recharge to the sand-and-gravel aquifer is relatively slow because of the presence of overlying glacial till of low permeability. Recharge to the Niagara aquifer occurs primarily through infiltration of precipitation that seeps through the glacial drift above the aquifer. As with the sand-and-gravel aquifer, the rate of recharge is limited by the relatively low permeability of the glacial drift. Some additional recharge to the Niagara aquifer occurs as lateral subsurface inflow from the west. Recharge to the sandstone aquifer, located in the Cambrian and Ordovician strata, occurs in the following three ways: 1) seepage through the relatively impermeable Maquoketa shale, 2) subsurface inflow from natural recharge areas located to the west in Walworth County, and 3) seepage from wells that are hydraulically connected to both the Niagara and the sandstone aquifers. Although the natural gradient of groundwater movement within the sandstone aquifer is from west to east, concentrated pumping in the Chicago area has created a southeasterly gradient. Springs are areas of concentrated discharge of groundwater at the land surface. Alone, or in conjunction with numerous smaller seeps, they may provide the source of base flow for streams and serve as a source of water for lakes, ponds, and wetlands. Conversely, under certain conditions, streams, lakes, ponds, and wetlands may be sources of recharge that create springs. The magnitude of discharge from a spring is a function of several factors, including the amount of precipitation falling on the land surface, the occurrence and extent of recharge areas of relatively high permeability, and the existence of geologic and topographical conditions favorable to discharge of groundwater to the land surface. The following groundwater information is for Kenosha County (from Protecting Wisconsin’s Groundwater through Comprehensive Planning website, http://wi.water.usgs.gov/gwcomp/), which roughly approximates to the Des Plaines River Watershed. Two of five municipal water systems in Kenosha County have a wellhead protection plan: Bristol and Paddock Lake, which are both located within the Des Plaines River Watershed. However, none of the five have a wellhead protection ordinance and the county has not adopted an animal waste management ordinance. From 1979 to 2005, total water use in Kenosha County has fluctuated from about 17.8 million gallons per day to 23.0 million gallons per day. The fluctuations in total water use are due primarily to fluctuations in public use and loss, industrial, and domestic uses. Commercial use increased during the same period. The proportion of county water use supplied by groundwater has fluctuated from about 11% to 18% during the period 1979 to 2005. Private Wells Ninety-two percent of 91 private well samples collected in Kenosha County from 1990 through 2006 met the health-based drinking water limit for nitrate-nitrogen. Land use affects nitrate concentrations in groundwater. An analysis of over 35,000 Wisconsin drinking water samples found that drinking water from private wells was three times more likely to be unsafe to drink due to high nitrate in agricultural areas than in forested areas. High nitrate levels were also more common in sandy areas where the soil is more permeable. In Wisconsin’s groundwater, 80% of nitrate inputs originate from manure spreading, agricultural fertilizers, and legume cropping systems. A 2002 study estimated that 21% of private drinking water wells in the region of Wisconsin that includes Kenosha County contained a detectable level of an herbicide or herbicide metabolite. Pesticides occur in groundwater more commonly in agricultural regions, but can occur anywhere pesticides are stored or applied. There are no atrazine prohibition areas in Kenosha County. One hundred percent of five private well samples collected in Kenosha County met the health standard for arsenic. Potential Sources of Contamination Pheasant Run Recycling & Disposal operates the one licensed landfill in the Des Plaines River Watershed in the town of Paris. There are no Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) or Superfund sites in the watershed. WDNR’s Remediation and Redevelopment (RR) Program oversees the investigation and cleanup of environmental contamination and the redevelopment of contaminated properties. The RR Program provides information about contaminated properties and other activities related to the investigation and cleanup of contaminated soil or groundwater in Wisconsin through its Bureau for Remediation and Redevelopment Tracking System (BRRTS) database (WDNR 2010e). The database shows that there are 215 sites in Kenosha County that are classified as “open”, meaning “contamination has affected soil, groundwater, or more and the environmental investigation and cleanup need to begin or are underway.” These sites include 51 Leaking Underground Storage Tank (LUST) sites, 73 Environmental Repair (ERP) sites, 83 spill sites, and eight Voluntary Party Liability Exemption (VPLE) sites. The Petroleum Environmental Cleanup Fund Award (PECFA) program was created in response to enactment of federal regulations requiring release prevention from underground storage tanks and cleanup of existing contamination from those tanks. PECFA is a reimbursement program returning a portion of incurred remedial cleanup costs to owners of eligible petroleum product systems, including home heating oil systems. As of May 31, 2007, $34,684,091 has been reimbursed by the PECFA program to clean up 236 petroleum-contaminated sites in Kenosha County. This equates to $214 per county resident, which is less than the statewide average of $264 per resident.

Date  2012

Impaired Waters

List of Impaired Waters
Watershed Documents
Watershed Grants
Grant Details
Aquatic Invasives Education
Date
4/1/2008
Waters Involved
Hooker Lake
Status
Complete

Hooker Lake Management District: Hooker Lake Apm Update: The Hooker Lake Management District will hire a contractor to conduct a plant survey and develop an aquatic plant management plan for Hooker Lake. The plant survey will be a point intercept survey with 238 points. The lake will be sampled in mid-summer. The final report will contain the following elements: 1)Results of the points sampled, including sediment type found and maximum rooting depth 2)Results of a general lake survey to map general plant beds, map localized plant beds, map species distribution and a list of plant species found 3)An aquatic plant management plan that meets the requirements of NR 109.09 4)Minutes from the public meeting regarding aquatic plant issues 5)Plants not collected in earlier survey will be collected 6)10 copies of the report will be provided to the District and a summary of the results will be mailed by the Town to the District residents

Two paper copies and one electronic copy of the final plan will be provided to the department. Exact details for all deliverables are described in the project description of the grant application.


Grant Details
Aquatic Invasives Education
Date
4/1/2008
Waters Involved
Salem Br
Status
Complete

Hooker Lake Management District: Hooker Lake Apm Update: The Hooker Lake Management District will hire a contractor to conduct a plant survey and develop an aquatic plant management plan for Hooker Lake. The plant survey will be a point intercept survey with 238 points. The lake will be sampled in mid-summer. The final report will contain the following elements: 1)Results of the points sampled, including sediment type found and maximum rooting depth 2)Results of a general lake survey to map general plant beds, map localized plant beds, map species distribution and a list of plant species found 3)An aquatic plant management plan that meets the requirements of NR 109.09 4)Minutes from the public meeting regarding aquatic plant issues 5)Plants not collected in earlier survey will be collected 6)10 copies of the report will be provided to the District and a summary of the results will be mailed by the Town to the District residents

Two paper copies and one electronic copy of the final plan will be provided to the department. Exact details for all deliverables are described in the project description of the grant application.


Grant Details
Aquatic Invasives Maintenance and Containment
Date
9/20/2011
Waters Involved
George Lake
Status
Complete

Lake George Public Inland P & R District: Lake George Permit Fee Reimbursement: Permit fee reimbursement for the maintenance and containment of aquatic invasive species on George Lake.


Grant Details
Clean Boats, Clean Waters
Date
2/15/2020
Waters Involved
Hooker Lake
Status
Complete

Village Of Paddock Lake: Village Of Paddock Lake 2020 Cbcw: Paddock Lake is sponsoring a Clean Boats Clean Waters project in 2020 at 0 single public boat landings and 1 public boat landing pairs on PADDOCK LAKE (68TH ST. LANDING), HOOKER LAKE.


Grant Details
Clean Boats, Clean Waters
Date
2/15/2020
Waters Involved
Paddock Lake
Status
Complete

Village Of Paddock Lake: Village Of Paddock Lake 2020 Cbcw: Paddock Lake is sponsoring a Clean Boats Clean Waters project in 2020 at 0 single public boat landings and 1 public boat landing pairs on PADDOCK LAKE (68TH ST. LANDING), HOOKER LAKE.


Grant Details
Lake Protection Grant
Date
9/1/1999
Waters Involved
Camp Lake
Status
Complete

Camp & Center Lakes Rehabilitation District: Res-Camp And Center Lake Bmps, Shoreline Restoration: Camp and Center P & R District intends to install a number of shoreland stabilizations measures on multiple properties on both Camp and Center lakes. The District also intends to install a number of BMP's on multiple properties draining to Camp and Center Lakes.


Grant Details
Lake Protection Grant
Date
4/15/2018
Waters Involved
George Lake
Status
Complete

George Lake Rehabilitation District: Lmi - George Lake Water Quality Improvement Projects: George Lake Rehabilitation District is sponsoring a project to implement best management practices to reduce sediment and nutrient loading to George Lake. An inlet restoration project, wetland basin modification project, and a vegetated filter strip project will be implemented on land owned by third parties.

Specific project activities include: 1) Development of bid ready plans and specifications for three projects; 2) Construction and implementation of a project to restore the banks of an inlet channel; 3) Modification of a wetland to filter runoff; 4) installation of a filter strip to filter runoff; and 5) securement of landowner agreements for installed practices.

Project final deliverables include: 1) electronic copies of all final construction plans and specifications; 2) a photo essay for each of the projects showing before, during and after construction; 3) a final report describing the issues resolved by installation of the three projects and 4) copies of the recorded landowner agreements for all installed practices.

Specific project conditions: 1)The operation and maintenance period for the inlet restoration project and wetland basin modification project is 25 years. The operation and maintenace period for the vegetated filter strip practice is 10 years; 2) A draft copy of the final report will be provided to the WDNR for review before the report is finalized. WDNR will be provided electronic and hard copies of data and reports/plans generated as a result of this project.

This scope summarizes the project detail provided in the application and does not negate tasks/deliverables described therein. DNR to receive both paper and electronic .pdf copies of the final report along with, or prior to submission of grantee's final payment request.


Grant Details
Lake Protection Grant
Date
9/1/2005
Waters Involved
Juniper Lake
Status
Complete

Walworth Cnty Land Use & Res Mgt: Res-Shoreline Habitat Restoration-Walworth Co.: Walworth County will continue the Walworth County Lakes Specialist position for one year. The Lakes Specialist will provide educational information to lake residents regarding shoreline stabilization and shoreline restoration. The Lakes Specialist will also design shoreline restoration projects for interested landowners, provide technical assistance to contractors and hold workshops on shoreland restoration. The project deliverable will be a report containing the following: 1) copies of the shoreland restoration designs; 2) copies of the fliers for each restoration workshop and 3) details regarding the accomplishments of the Lakes Specialist over the year of the grant. Two paper copies and one electronic copy of the report will be provided to the Department of Natural Resources


Grant Details
Lake Protection Grant
Date
9/1/2000
Waters Involved
Powers Lake
Status
Complete

Powers Lake Protection And Rehab. District: Acq-Wetland Acquisition-Powers Lake: This wetland acquisition project includes the following: 1)Acquire through fee simple purchase wetlands reparian to the unnamed stream discharging into Powers Lake; 2)Promote the essential sturcture and function of these wetland areas to ensure positive water quality benefit to the downstream Powers Lake; 3)Facilitate the maintenance of wetland and wildlife habitat within the designated primary environmental corridor tributary to Powers Lake; 4)Encourage public knowledge and understanding of wetland ecosystems through programming in consultation with relevant institutions and agencies.


Grant Details
Lake Protection Grant
Date
4/15/2018
Waters Involved
Unnamed
Status
Complete

George Lake Rehabilitation District: Lmi - George Lake Water Quality Improvement Projects: George Lake Rehabilitation District is sponsoring a project to implement best management practices to reduce sediment and nutrient loading to George Lake. An inlet restoration project, wetland basin modification project, and a vegetated filter strip project will be implemented on land owned by third parties.

Specific project activities include: 1) Development of bid ready plans and specifications for three projects; 2) Construction and implementation of a project to restore the banks of an inlet channel; 3) Modification of a wetland to filter runoff; 4) installation of a filter strip to filter runoff; and 5) securement of landowner agreements for installed practices.

Project final deliverables include: 1) electronic copies of all final construction plans and specifications; 2) a photo essay for each of the projects showing before, during and after construction; 3) a final report describing the issues resolved by installation of the three projects and 4) copies of the recorded landowner agreements for all installed practices.

Specific project conditions: 1)The operation and maintenance period for the inlet restoration project and wetland basin modification project is 25 years. The operation and maintenace period for the vegetated filter strip practice is 10 years; 2) A draft copy of the final report will be provided to the WDNR for review before the report is finalized. WDNR will be provided electronic and hard copies of data and reports/plans generated as a result of this project.

This scope summarizes the project detail provided in the application and does not negate tasks/deliverables described therein. DNR to receive both paper and electronic .pdf copies of the final report along with, or prior to submission of grantee's final payment request.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
12/20/1990
Waters Involved
George Lake
Status
Complete

George Lake Inland Lake R & P District: George Lake Management Plan Update: The George Lake Inland Lake Rehabilitation and Protection District proposes to update the management plan developed from the 1978 feasibility study with new cost data and verification of original findings. Project activities will include determination of whether the original disposal sites for sediment are still available along with lab and field tests of the sediments and the disposal sites. A lake usage ordinance will also be drafted for the district. Information about the project will be disseminated to the public by public meeting and entire report mailings.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
10/17/1991
Waters Involved
George Lake
Status
Complete

Lake George Public Inland P & R District: George Lake Management Planning: Analyze historical lake water quality data. Make recommendations for future monitoring. Volunteer to collect water quality data.Delineate watershed boundaries. Produce list of landowners in the lake district and their properties' current and proposed land uses.Identify and map point and non-point pollution sources. Make corrective recommendations for problem areas.Identify and map sensitive areas, including wetland, cropped wetlands, and conservancy areas. Make recommendations for protection and/or restoration. Volunteer will provide air transport to take aerial photos.Disseminate information to the public by public meetings and a final report.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
10/30/1995
Waters Involved
George Lake
Status
Complete

George Lake Protection And Rehab District: George Lake Agricultural Land Use & Wetlands Inventory: (1) Perform an agricultural land use inventory of the George Lake area and create map(s) identifying agricultural acreages, agricultural acres planned with BMPs, agricultural areas where BMPs have been implemented, under what state and federal programs, for what time periods, and county agricultural soil erosion plan acres identified as having potential adverse impacts on surface/ground waters. (2) Identify wetlands on a map using the USDA NRCS inventory and show any wetlands restored from agricultural use; identify sensitive water resources. (3) Review and summarize in a report historical water quality assessment data existing for George Lake. (4) Identify any urban stormwater improvement projects on a map; recommend areas where needed. (5) Recommend changes to local shoreland/wetland ordinances to address water quality issues/problems (6) Prepare a final report including the results of tasks 1-5. The sponsor will provide the Department with a paper copy and an electronic copy of the final report. Information about the project results will be disseminated to the public by newsletter mailing and public meeting. LPL-334.1: The scope of the project expanded to include delineating the watershed sub basins on the land use maps.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
4/1/2002
Waters Involved
George Lake
Status
Complete

George Lake Inland Lake R & P District: George Lake Aquatic Plant Mgt. Plan: George Lake Rehabilitation District is planning to study aquatic plants within George Lake and tributaries/wetlands and devise a plan to restore native plants. This is to improve aquatic wildlife along with the water quality of the lake. Sampling will be done and information will be in meetings and mailing to Lake District.

They will send a revised aquatic plant management plan to the DNR.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
4/1/2003
Waters Involved
George Lake
Status
Complete

George Lake Rehabilitation District: George Lake Mgt. Plan: SEWRPC Lake Management Plan will be written for the lake. Plan will include the following: water quality data, aquatic plant inventory, recreational use survey, shoreline condition survey, refinement of environmental corridors and discussion of management alternatives.

Project deliverable is the completed lake management plan report.

The DNR will be provided with a hard copy and an electronic copy of the final report.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
11/26/1991
Waters Involved
Hooker Lake
Status
Complete

Hooker Lake Management District: Hooker Lake Management Planning: 1. Water quality monitoring will be conducted by USGS according to Table 1 - Water Quality Trend Monitoring sampling site shown in Figure 1 of the application. A lake district volunteer will take secchi disk readings and lake stage level readings.2. Macrophyte survey will be conducted following schedule and methods described in Project Description of the application. 3. Aerial photos of lake will be taken to identify areas of plant growth. Timing and locations will be the same as the macrophytesurvey. Copies of all photos and slides will be provided to the Hooker Management District. 4. Historical records of lake surveys, chemical treatments, and aerial photos will be collected and incorporated into the above analyses. 5. Watershed bound-aries will be delineated on topographical maps. Problem and sensitive areas including highly erodible soils, wetlands, woodlands, and conservancy areas will be delineated. Management recommendations will be made for problem areas. 6. An educational'Watershed Watchers' program will be developed. 7. Conduct a riparian boat inventory and on-lake counts. Water clarity data will be collected as described in Section IV of the Project Description in the application. Boat use will be correlated with


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
10/1/2011
Waters Involved
Hooker Lake
Status
Complete

Hooker Lake Management District: 2011 Watershed & Water Quality /Levels Study: The Hooker Lake Management District will hire a contractor to study the impact of stormwater discharging into Hooker Lake, especially from the STH 83 road expansion. Nutrient samples will be taken from three tributaries to Hooker Lake a total of 7 times. The project deliverable will be a report containing the following elements: 1) inventory of existing water quality data; 2) results of 7 sampling events on three tributaries; 3) use of the field data to run UAL and WILMS models; 4) results of a recreational use survey; 5) results of a shoreline condition survey; 6) mapping of environmental corridors; 7) results of historical map analysis to determine changes in Hooker Lake surface area over time; 8) conclusions from the study and management recommendations; 9) an assessment of whether STH 83 stormwater contributes significant nutrient loading to Hooker Lake and 10) minutes from a public informational meeting discussing the results of the study.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
10/1/2011
Waters Involved
Hooker Lake
Status
In_Progress

Hooker Lake Management District: 2011 Watershed & Water Quality /Levels Study: The Hooker Lake Management District will hire a contractor to study the impact of stormwater discharging into Hooker Lake, especially from the STH 83 road expansion. Nutrient samples will be taken from three tributaries to Hooker Lake a total of 7 times. The project deliverable will be a report containing the following elements: 1) inventory of existing water quality data; 2) results of 7 sampling events on three tributaries; 3) use of the field data to run UAL and WILMS models; 4) results of a recreational use survey; 5) results of a shoreline condition survey; 6) mapping of environmental corridors; 7) results of historical map analysis to determine changes in Hooker Lake surface area over time; 8) conclusions from the study and management recommendations; 9) an assessment of whether STH 83 stormwater contributes significant nutrient loading to Hooker Lake and 10) minutes from a public informational meeting discussing the results of the study.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
10/1/2011
Waters Involved
Hooker Lake
Status
Proposed

Hooker Lake Management District: 2011 Watershed & Water Quality /Levels Study: The Hooker Lake Management District will hire a contractor to study the impact of stormwater discharging into Hooker Lake, especially from the STH 83 road expansion. Nutrient samples will be taken from three tributaries to Hooker Lake a total of 7 times. The project deliverable will be a report containing the following elements: 1) inventory of existing water quality data; 2) results of 7 sampling events on three tributaries; 3) use of the field data to run UAL and WILMS models; 4) results of a recreational use survey; 5) results of a shoreline condition survey; 6) mapping of environmental corridors; 7) results of historical map analysis to determine changes in Hooker Lake surface area over time; 8) conclusions from the study and management recommendations; 9) an assessment of whether STH 83 stormwater contributes significant nutrient loading to Hooker Lake and 10) minutes from a public informational meeting discussing the results of the study.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
11/17/1992
Waters Involved
Paddock Lake
Status
Complete

Paddock Lake P & R District: Paddock Lake Management Planning: 1) Monitor water quality during 1993. Summarize existing and new data to determine trophic status of lake. 2) Develop a water budget for the lake.3) Develop a nutrient budget for the watershed. 4) Develop a lake management plan.5) Disseminate information to the public by newsletter, local newspaper article, public meetings, summary report mailings, and TV or radio spots.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
10/18/1994
Waters Involved
Paddock Lake
Status
Complete

Paddock Lake P & R District: Paddock Lake Nonpoint Pollution Controls Analysis: Analyze nonpoint pollution controls for sub-watershed. Determine if runoff pollution can be controlled by structural practices. The grantee will disseminate information to the public by newsletter, video programs, public meetings, summary reportmailings, local newspaper articles, TV and radio spots, and a comprehensive management plan. Project results will be reposited at Village Hall.


Grant Details
Large Scale Lake Planning
Date
4/1/2003
Waters Involved
Paddock Lake
Status
Complete

Paddock Lake P & R District: Paddock Lake Plant Mgt. Plan Reassessment: An aquatic plant survey will be conducted in mid summer and an updated aquatic plant management plan will be prepared. The plan will contain results of the transact survey, maps of plant beds, discussion of the historical aquatic plant management techniques used on the lake, map of the lake morphology, description of sensitive areas and recommendations for aquatic plant control methods.

Project deliverables include 12 copies of the report to the district, 2 copies of the report to the DNR and a copy of the plant transact field data.

The DNR will be provided with an electronic copy of the final report. Information will be disseminated to the public as described in the grant application.


Grant Details
Small Scale Lake Planning
Date
2/15/2015
Waters Involved
George Lake
Status
Complete

George Lake Rehabilitation District: 2015 Nutrient Load Analysis: The George Lake Rehabilitation District will continue a previously started sampling effort to study nutrients in 4 tributaries to George Lake. Samples will be taken on two separate days following rain events. Flow rate will be determined at each sampling site on each sampling date. Samples will be taken for total phosphorus, orthophosphate, chloride, suspended solids and nitrate/nitrite. The project deliverable will be a short report that contains a description of field methods, compiles the data from this grant as well as data collected previous to this grant, a discussion of what the data does and does not resolve and a discussion of next steps. A draft of the report shall be provided to both Heidi Bunk and Craig Helker prior to finalizing the report. Two paper copies and 1 electronic copy of the report should be provided to the Department.


Grant Details
Small Scale Lake Planning
Date
4/1/2008
Waters Involved
Lake Shangrila
Status
Complete

Town Of Salem: Benet-Shagrila Apm: The Town of Salem will hire a contractor to conduct a plant survey and develop an aquatic plant management plan for the Benet-Shangrila Lakes. The plant survey will be a modified point intercept survey that uses GPS navigation. Four rake samples will be taken at each survey point. A final report will contain the following elements:

1) Results of the points sampled, including sediment type found and maximum rooting depth, 2) Results of a general lake survey to map general plant beds, map localized plant beds, map species distribution and a list of plant species found, 3) Review of existing conditions of the watershed, identify and quantify potential point and nonpoint sources of pollution, and identify nutrient and contaminant input and balances, 4) Results of WILMS and UAL modeling, 5) Results of recreational use survey, 6) An aquatic plant management plan that meets the requirements of NR 109.09, and 7) Minutes from two public meetings regarding aquatic plant issues.

Two paper copies and one electronic copy of the report will be provided to the Department.


Grant Details
Small Scale Lake Planning
Date
2/15/2015
Waters Involved
Unnamed
Status
Complete

George Lake Rehabilitation District: 2015 Nutrient Load Analysis: The George Lake Rehabilitation District will continue a previously started sampling effort to study nutrients in 4 tributaries to George Lake. Samples will be taken on two separate days following rain events. Flow rate will be determined at each sampling site on each sampling date. Samples will be taken for total phosphorus, orthophosphate, chloride, suspended solids and nitrate/nitrite. The project deliverable will be a short report that contains a description of field methods, compiles the data from this grant as well as data collected previous to this grant, a discussion of what the data does and does not resolve and a discussion of next steps. A draft of the report shall be provided to both Heidi Bunk and Craig Helker prior to finalizing the report. Two paper copies and 1 electronic copy of the report should be provided to the Department.


Grant Details
Targeted Runoff - Rural Construction
Date
1/1/2002
Waters Involved
Paddock Lake
Status
Complete

Paddock Lake P & R District: Paddock Lake Trm Project: To cost-share @70% expenses relating to construction of the Paddock Lake Stormwater Management project.


Grant Details
Targeted Runoff - Urban Construction
Date
1/1/2003
Waters Involved
Paddock Lake
Status
Complete

Village Of Paddock Lake: Shoreline Protection & Stabilization: to c-s @70% shoreline protection project


Grant Details
Urban Nonpoint - Stormwater Construction
Date
1/1/2002
Waters Involved
Kilbourn Road Ditch
Status
Complete

Village Of Bristol: Pond A Restoration: To c-s @ 50% design & construction of Pond A restoration


Grant Details
Urban Nonpoint - Stormwater Planning
Date
1/1/2004
Waters Involved
Lower Pleasant Prairie Dit.
Status
Complete

Village Of Pleasant Prairie: Stormwater Management Plan: to costshare at 70% development of stormwater plan


Grant Details
Urban Nonpoint - Stormwater Planning
Date
1/1/2004
Waters Involved
Unnamed
Status
Complete

Village Of Bristol: Stormwater Mgmt Plan: to cost-share at 70% development of stormwater plan


Grant Details
River Planning Grant
Date
7/1/2005
Waters Involved
Des Plaines River
Status
Complete

Village Of Pleasant Prairie: Inventory & Mgt. Plan-Des Plaines: The Village of Pleasant Prairie is applying for a river planning grant in the amount of $10,000 to hire a biologist to inventory the flora and fauna of a 430-acre conservation preserve adjacent to the Des Plaines River and develop a management plan. The total project costs are $31,000

The objective of this project is to assess the condition of the natural resources within the project area and to develop a natural resource management plan that identifies these resources and their locations, describes their quality and natural history, provides photo documentation, recommends and prioritizes ecological management activities, and develops educational material for Prairie Springs Park.

The condition of the streams and riparian corridors will be delineated, documented, and digitized. A management plan will be developed and submitted as part of the final report. All inventories, assessments, and mapping will also be included with the final report.

This project will produce a comprehensive report that will provide a description of the historic landscape of the area; natural resources of the site; discussion of the impact of exotic and invasive species; maps of stream courses, plant communities, management areas, and possible trail routes; and recommendations for Des Plaines River lowlands management activities.


Grant Details
River Planning Grant
Date
7/1/2005
Waters Involved
Root River
Status
Complete

Root-Pike Watershed Initiative Network: Root-Pike Win Strategic Planning: Root-Pike WIN is applying for a river planning grant in the amount of $6,328. However, project ranking and budget limitations have reduced the grant award to $3,773

The purpose of the project is to update Root-Pike WIN's planning strategies to reflect the future needs and direction of the organization. This will allow the group to successfully continue their mission to protect, restore, and sustain the Root-Pike watershed ecosystem. The primary goal is to create a strategic plan that will ensure the growth and effectiveness of Root-Pike WIN.

The methods used to create the strategic plan will include planning and facilitating two professional meetings and gather information for planning efforts. The development of the strategic plan will come from the information gathered during the planning, organizational assessment, and strategic planning sessions.

The strategic plan will be included with the final project report to the WDNR.


Grant Details
River Planning Grant
Date
7/1/2010
Waters Involved
Root River
Status
Complete

River Alliance Of Wisconsin: Building Capacity Of The Root River Council: The goal is to create stable professional leadership to work with Council members to advance the mission and vision of the council and implement the vision of the Back to the Root \2013 an Urban River Revitalization Plan. The final report will include a detailed report of all activities associated with the project. Activities involve developing a communication and marketing plan, strengthening partnerships within the community, expanding volunteers, educational outreach, and becoming an independent River Management Organization.


Monitoring & Projects

Projects including grants, restoration work and studies shown below have occurred in this watershed. Click the links below to read through the text. While these are not an exhaustive list of activities, they provide insight into the management activities happening in this watershed.

Monitoring Studies

River Monitoring to comply with Clean Water Act implementation - water quality standards: use designations, criterion, permit issuance and compliance, assessments and impaired waters management. Fisheries projects include a wide variety of "baseline" monitoring and targeted fieldwork to gain specific knowledge related to Wisconsin's fish communities. In close cooperation with UW Extension and Wisconsin Sea Grant, education efforts focus on working with resource professionals and citizens statewide to teach boaters, anglers, and other water users how to prevent transporting aquatic invasive species when moving their boats. Additional initiatives include monitoring and control programs. Volunteer Monitoring The Citizen Lake Monitoring Network, the core of the Wisconsin Lakes Partnership, involves over 1,000 citizen volunteers statewide. The goals are to collect high quality data, to educate and empower volunteers, and to share this data and knowledge. Volunteers measure water clarity, using the Secchi Disk method, as an indicator of water quality. This information is then used to determine the lakes trophic state. Volunteers may also collect chemistry, temperature, and dissolved oxygen data, as well as identify and map plants, watch for the first appearance of Eurasian water-milfoil near boat landings, or alert officials about zebra mussel invasions on Wisconsin lakes. Monitoring work in this watershed consists of lake monitoring and surveys for water quality, aquatic plants, aquatic invasive species, and ice observations. Citizen Based Stream Monitoring in the Des Plaines River Watershed Two volunteer stream monitoring stations have been monitored from 2008 through 2010 in the FX01-Des Plaines River Watershed. Students attending Indian Trail Academy monitored Kilbourn Creek between 50th and 60th, CBSM-10032015 (Kilbourn Creek), and a local family monitored Root River, Strawberry Creek, 50 feet east of 144th Ave. in Bristol, CBSM-10032016 (Strawberry Creek). Both stations are monitored using Level 1 procedures and are entered into the WAV database (http://www.uwex.edu/erc/wavdb/). On average, stations in the watershed were monitored monthly from May through October for biotic index, flow, dissolved oxygen, instantaneous temperature and transparency. Kilbourn Creek was also monitored for nitrates, phosphates and pH. Volunteers collect macroinvertebrates twice a year to determine a biotic index for each stream. Streams are considered in poor quality if biotic index is between 1.0-2.0, fair quality if between 2.1-2.5, and in good quality if the index is between 2.6-3.5. Overall, biotic index values rated streams in the watershed to be in fair to good quality (ranging from 2.1-2.8). Stream flow varied between the two streams depending on local weather patterns each year. Generally, there was a higher flow rate in the spring than late summer and fall. Average stream flow measurements for the eighteen field events were 9.75 cubic feet per second (cfs) and ranged from 0.5-54.1 cfs at Strawberry Creek and 7.2-27.5 cfs at Kilbourn Creek. Generally, volunteers recorded dissolved oxygen levels in the watershed ranging from 6.5-16 mg/l, which are sufficient to sustain aquatic life, except for two out of the seventeen field events at Strawberry Creek. Volunteers measured dissolved oxygen at this station to be 4.5 mg/l on 09/18/2009, and 4.0 mg/l on 10/10/2010. Temperature measurements, used to classify streams as cold, cool or warm water habitats, and which are indicative of the ability of a habitat to sustain aquatic species, were manually recorded at both stations. Maximum instantaneous temperatures were below 25°C for both, suggesting they may be cold water streams. Stream transparency measurements indicated good water quality with 52% of measurements less than 10 NTU. None of the remaining 48% were over 240 NTU. Volunteers measured pH using dip strips at Kilbourn Creek on 10/13/2009 and 05/18/2010 and found the stream to be nearly neutral with measurements of 7.18 and 7.2.

Date  2012

Volunteer Monitoring

Two volunteer stream monitoring stations have been monitored from 2008 through 2010 in the FX01-Des Plaines River Watershed. Students attending Indian Trail Academy monitored Kilbourn Creek between 50th and 60th, CBSM-10032015 (Kilbourn Creek), and a local family monitored Root River, Strawberry Creek, 50 feet east of 144th Ave. in Bristol, CBSM-10032016 (Strawberry Creek). Both stations are monitored using Level 1 procedures and are entered into the WAV database (http://www.uwex.edu/erc/wavdb/). On average, stations in the watershed were monitored monthly from May through October for biotic index, flow, dissolved oxygen, instantaneous temperature and transparency. Kilbourn Creek was also monitored for nitrates, phosphates and pH. Volunteers collect macroinvertebrates twice a year to determine a biotic index for each stream. Streams are considered in poor quality if biotic index is between 1.0-2.0, fair quality if between 2.1-2.5, and in good quality if the index is between 2.6-3.5. Overall, biotic index values rated streams in the watershed to be in fair to good quality (ranging from 2.1-2.8). Stream flow varied between the two streams depending on local weather patterns each year. Generally, there was a higher flow rate in the spring than late summer and fall. Average stream flow measurements for the eighteen field events were 9.75 cubic feet per second (cfs) and ranged from 0.5-54.1cfs at Strawberry Creek and 7.2-27.5 cfs at Kilbourn Creek. Generally, volunteers recorded dissolved oxygen levels in the watershed ranging from 6.5-16mg/l, which are sufficient to sustain aquatic life, except for two out of the seventeen field events at Strawberry Creek. Volunteers measured dissolved oxygen at this station to be 4.5mg/l on 09/18/2009, and 4.0mg/l on 10/10/2010. Temperature measurements, used to classify streams as cold, cool or warm water habitats, and which are indicative of the ability of a habitat to sustain aquatic species were manually recorded at both stations. Maximum instantaneous temperatures were below 25°C for both; suggesting they may be cold water streams. Stream transparency measurements indicated good water quality with 52% of measurements less than 10 NTU. None of the remaining 48% were over 240 NTU. Volunteers measured pH using dip strips at Kilbourn Creek on 10/13/2009 and 05/18/2010 and found the stream to be nearly neutral with measurements of 7.18 and 7.2.

Date  2012

Grants and Management Projects
Des Plaines River Watershed

Goals

1/4/2012
Increase awareness of watershed stewardship within the watershed through multiple outreach and education activities.
1/4/2012
Work with local communities and other governmental bodies to encourage preservation and identification of sensitive woodlands to preserve these areas in the atershed.
1/4/2012
Work with local communities to reduce polluting runoff and encourage wellhead protection ordinances.

Priorities

10/17/2011
Highway runoff contributes sediment, nutrients, and pollutants to local waterways.
10/17/2011
There is a lack of adequate stream buffers in portions of the watershed.
10/17/2011
The potential impact of farm tiles to stream water quality is not well understood.
10/17/2011
Fish passage barriers prevent passage of fish species to historic spawning or nursery areas.
10/17/2011
Lack of inventory and monitoring data limits ability to identify source control areas and to classify the waterways and determine if they should be added to the EPA 303(d) list of impaired waterways.
10/17/2011
Runoff from developed (and developing) areas has a significant negative impact to water quality through the introduction of sediment, nutrients, and other pollutants to nearby waterways.
10/17/2011
Loss of wetlands and woodlands in the watershed has resulted in the loss of valuable fish & wildlife habitat, plus other potential benefits, such as filtering pollutants, maintaining summer base flow, alleviating flooding concerns, and reducing water temperatures.
10/17/2011
Lack of awareness, understanding and participation in watershed stewardship.
10/17/2011
Aquatic invasive species are present and can have negative impacts on native species.
10/17/2011
Extensive ditching has reduced in-stream habitat quality.
10/17/2011
In-stream warm-water fish habitat needs improvement.
10/17/2011
Sedimentation from bank erosion and agricultural fields impacts water quality and available habitat.
1/4/2012
The historic loss of 75% of wetlands in the watershed is a pressing issue for this area.
1/4/2012
Need for wellhead protection ordinances in watershed communities due to potential complex groundwater, drinking water issues in the area.
1/4/2012
The historic and current disappearance of woodlands due to development throughout the watershed has had a major impact on the ecological diversity and complexity of this watershed.
Watershed Recommendations
APM Chemical Permit Request
APM Chemical Permit Request
Date
Status
Chemical permit details
1/29/2019
Approved
Projects
 
Engage Volunteers in Monitoring/Restoration
 
Date
Status
Water Quality Biologists should work with interest groups in establishing or continuing to support volunteer monitoring on the rivers and lakes of the Des Plaines Watershed.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Fish Management, Access
 
Date
Status
The Department should continue working with Lake Districts and other interested parties to maintain and enhance fishing opportunities in the Des Plaines Watershed.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Fish Management, Access
 
Date
Status
Identify and improve barriers to fish passage throughout the Des Plaines Watershed.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Habitat Restoration - Instream
 
Date
Status
Fisheries and water quality staff should continue to work with external partners on habitat improvement projects within the Des Plaines Watershed.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Information and Education
 
Date
Status
Increase awareness, understanding and participation in watershed stewardship in the Des Plaines Watershed.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Monitor Invasive Species
 
Date
Status
Facilitate and provide incentives for increased management by private landowners, organizations, businesses, municipalities and agencies to monitor and control the invasion by non-native species in the Des Plaines Watershed.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Monitor Invasive Species
 
Date
Status
Determine the extent and distribution of invasive plant species in the Des Plaines Watershed.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Monitor Water Quality or Sediment
GLPF2018_LM1802_ChlorideStudy
Date
Status
Chloride Impact Study for the Southeastern Wisconsin Region
6/1/2018
In Progress
Projects
 
Monitor Water Quality or Sediment
Brighton Creek TP
Date
Status
Category 2. 2018 TP Results: May Exceed. Station: 10008154. AU: 10422.
1/1/2018
Proposed
Projects
 
Monitor or Assess Watershed Condition
 
Date
Status
Water Quality Biologists should conduct/update stream assessments on all of the tributaries to the Des Plaines.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Ordinance Development or Implementation
 
Date
Status
The Department should encourage all communities in the Des Plaines Watershed to adopt/update construction site erosion and stormwater management ordinances in order to minimize polluted runoff from developed areas.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Restore Wetlands
 
Date
Status
Restore and manage key wetlands, woodlands, and shorelands in the Des Plaines Watershed.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Runoff Evaluation
 
Date
Status
Work to minimize polluted runoff from agricultural areas in the Des Plaines Watershed. Because funding for farm conservation practices is limited, these resources should be directed to the highest priority runoff areas first. Goals should include reducing soil erosion, controlling animal waste runoff, and meeting nutrient management requirements.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Runoff Evaluation
 
Date
Status
Water Quality Biologists should continue working with the communities, Kenosha County Land Conservation Department, the agricultural community, and others to improve the water quality by decreasing sediment runoff, nutrient loads, and stormwater runoff to the Des Plaines and Tributaries.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Runoff Grant
 
Date
Status
Brighton Creek should be considered as a high priority for selection of non-point source management projects and funding.
10/17/2011
Proposed
 
Sewer Service Area Planning
SEWRPC WQM Planning, Grants support, TMDL work
Date
Status
sewrpc area WQM planning
12/31/2020
In Progress
Projects
 
Shoreland Monitoring, Assessment, Inventory
Grant LPL-1466-12 - Shoreland Survey
Date
Status
Shoreland Monitoring, Assessment or Inventory
10/1/2011
Proposed
Projects
 
Social Survey of Residents or Users
 
Date
Status
10/1/2011
In Progress
Projects
 
Stormwater Planning, Implementation
Norway- In-Depth Water Quality Analysis & Stormwater Program
Date
Status
This project promotes nonpoint source best management practices to contribute to the restoration of Wisconsin's waters and was funded by the 319 grant. Storm water planning activities will be undertaken by the municipality and will result in the following products: updated storm water management plan for part of the developed urban area; and an updated storm water management plan for new development.
1/1/2018
In Progress
Projects
 
Stormwater Planning, Implementation
Targeted 9 Element I&E Program of SE WI Clean Water Network
Date
Status
This project is an installation of nonpoint source best management practices to contribute to the restoration of Wisconsin's waters and was funded by the 319 grant. Storm water planning activities will be undertaken by the municipality and will result in the following products: a comprehensive storm water information and education program.
1/1/2018
In Progress
Projects
 
Stormwater Planning, Implementation
SEWRPC Burlington Stormwater Study
Date
Status
This project promotes nonpoint source best management practices to contribute to the restoration of Wisconsin's waters and was funded by the 319 grant. The Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission will conduct a storm water management study for the city of Burlington. The study shall identify the location and destination of current storm water flows, identify city and private property owners that have storm water capacity issues, and provide recommendations for eliminating flooding at the city's major businesses.
9/25/2017
In Progress
Projects
 
Water Quality Planning
AWQMP Program - SEWRPC
Date
Status
sewrpc program 2021
1/1/2021
In Progress
Projects
 
Water Quality Planning
 
Date
Status
Watershed Planning was conducted from 2010 to 2011.
7/1/2010
In Progress
Projects
 
Des Plaines River WatershedWater Plans and PartnershipsRead the Watershed Plan

Hooker Lake Management District, Walworth County, George Lake Inland Lake Rehabilitation and Protection District, Paddock Lake Rehabilitation and Protection District, Town of Salem, Village of Paddock Lake, Village of Bristol, Village Of Pleasant Prairie and The Lake Shangrila Woodlands Homeowners Association.

Date  2012

Water Plans and PartnershipsRead the Watershed Plan

Des Plaines River Watershed (FX01) Draft Water Quality Management Plan

Date  2011

Watershed History Note

Paddock Lake, in Kenosha County and in the Des Plaines River watershed, was named after Dr. Francis Paddock (1814-1889), a frontier doctor who settled in the area. In 1838, at the age of twenty-five and finished with his medical education, Francis and his family, three generations of it, traveled west from New York in a covered wagon to what was then the Wisconsin Territory. He and his family settled between two lakes now known as Paddock and Hooker Lakes in the town of Salem in Kenosha County, Wisconsin. Starting their new life, the Paddock family purchased about 400 acres of land from the government at $1.50 an acre and built a log cabin on the land. On August 19, 1841, he married Martha Cecilla Munson. They had fourteen children together, nine of whom survived to adulthood. Dr. Paddock was the first medical professional in the area. Not only a physician, he was also a businessman and a farmer. He ended up becoming one of the wealthiest and most influential members of his community. In 1843, he acquired 281 acres of land from the U.S. Land Patent Office. The Paddock farm had between 1500 and 2000 sheep and at one time over 100 cows and perhaps as many horses. Dr. Paddock was an example of the typical country doctor, having to ride horseback for miles in all kinds of Wisconsin weather Dr. Francis Paddock died on March 29, 1889 in his home in Salem and was laid to rest in Salem Cemetery. In 1960, the hamlet known as Paddock Lake in the Town of Salem was approved to separate from Salem and The Village of Paddock Lake was created.

Date  2010