Taylor
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Fish and Aquatic Life
Overview
Nona Lake, in the Upper Yellow (Taylor Co.) River Watershed, is a 5.86 acre lake that falls in Taylor County. This lake is managed for fishing and swimming and is currently not considered impaired.
Date 2011
Author Aquatic Biologist
Historical Description
Source: 1970, Surface Water Resources of Taylor County Nona Lake, T31N, R2W, Section 4 Surface Acres = 5.2, Maximum Depth = 26 feet, M.P.A. = 42 ppm, Secchi Disk = 4 feet A soft water seepage lake having slightly acid, clear water, and an intermittent outlet to Joseph Creek. Winterkills of fish occur frequently, and as a result the only fish present are bullheads and forage minnows. A tag alder-tamarack, bog surrounds the lake. The littoral zone bottom is made up entirely of muck and supports a variety of aquatic vegetation, including pickerel weed, horsetail, cattail, yellow and white water lilies, smartweed, pondweed, duckweed, coontail, and bladderwort. Muskrat use is significant, but there are no beaver present. The lake is used to some degree by migratory waterfowl. Mallard ducks use the lake edges for nesting. There is no residential development on the lake shore.
Date 1970
Author Surface Water Inventory Of Wisconsin
Condition
Wisconsin has over 84,000 miles of streams, 15,000 lakes and milllions of acres of wetlands. Assessing the condition of this vast amount of water is challenging. The state's water monitoring program uses a media-based, cross-program approach to analyze water condition. An updated monitoring strategy (2015-2020) is now available. Compliance with Clean Water Act fishable, swimmable standards are located in the Executive Summary of Water Condition in 2018. See also the 'monitoring and projects' tab.
Reports
Management Goals
Wisconsin's Water Quality Standards provide qualitative and quantitative goals for waters that are protective of Fishable, Swimmable conditions [Learn more]. Waters that do not meet water quality standards are considered impaired and restoration actions are planned and carried out until the water is once again fishable and swimmable
Management goals can include creation or implementation of a Total Maximum Daily Load analysis, a Nine Key Element Plan, or other restoration work, education and outreach and more. If specific recommendations exist for this water, they will be displayed below online.
Monitoring
Monitoring the condition of a river, stream, or lake includes gathering physical, chemical, biological, and habitat data. Comprehensive studies often gather all these parameters in great detail, while lighter assessment events will involve sampling physical, chemical and biological data such as macroinvertebrates. Aquatic macroinvertebrates and fish communities integrate watershed or catchment condition, providing great insight into overall ecosystem health. Chemical and habitat parameters tell researchers more about human induced problems including contaminated runoff, point source dischargers, or habitat issues that foster or limit the potential of aquatic communities to thrive in a given area. Wisconsin's Water Monitoring Strategy was recenty updated.
Grants and Management Projects
Project Name (Click for Details) | Year Started |
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Monitoring Projects
WBIC | Official Waterbody Name | Station ID | Station Name | Earliest Fieldwork Date | Latest Fieldwork Date | View Station | View Data |
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2162200 | Nona Lake | 10005879 | Nona Lake | 8/8/2001 | 9/15/2012 | Map | Data |
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Watershed Characteristics
Nona Lake is located in the Upper Yellow (Taylor Co.) River watershed which is 241.08 miĀ². Land use in the watershed is primarily forest (51.50%), wetland (30.60%) and a mix of agricultural (10.80%) and other uses (7.10%). This watershed has 306.51 stream miles, 682.42 lake acres and 30,178.84 wetland acres.
Nonpoint Source Characteristics
This watershed is ranked Low for runoff impacts on streams, Not Ranked for runoff impacts on lakes and Low for runoff impacts on groundwater and therefore has an overall rank of Low. This value can be used in ranking the watershed or individual waterbodies for grant funding under state and county programs.However, all waters are affected by diffuse pollutant sources regardless of initial water quality. Applications for specific runoff projects under state or county grant programs may be pursued. For more information, go to surface water program grants.