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Department of Natural Science
Edgewood College
Madison, WisconsinWhat is a watershed?
It's the area of land that catches precipitation (like rain and snow) and
drains or seeps into a marsh, stream, river, lake, ocean or groundwater.
In much of Dane County, Wisconsin, precipitation running off the land
surface is carried to the Yahara River, which flows to the Rock River, then
the Mississippi River. Where does the Mississippi flow?
Watersheds can be as big as all the land that drains into the Pacific Ocean,
or as small as an acre that drains into your schoolyard pond. Madison,
Wisconsin is part of many different watersheds, one bigger than the next.
The Yahara Watershed is part of the larger Rock River Watershed, which is in
turn part of the Mississippi River Watershed.
Watersheds are made up of houses, neighborhoods, schools, farms, parks, big
cities, and little towns. A watershed doesn't always pay attention to
human-made borders, either. Some cross city, county, state, and even
international borders.
One way of looking at a watershed is through a watershed wheel. This is a
way to show how the interaction of space and time serves to organize the
variety of life and activities in the watershed on an annual basis.
Why watersheds?
The watershed provides a powerful study and management unit which integrates
ecological, geographical, geological, and cultural aspects of the land. The
watershed is also a useful concept for integrating science with historical,
cultural, economic, and political issues. Water (movement, cycling, use,
quality, etc.) provides a focus for integrating various aspects of watershed
use and for making regional and global connections.
Using the watershed concept, one can start with study of any number of small
sub systems (e.g., a particular marsh or sub-watershed; or a particular
pollutant, such as salt), and continually relate these small-scale issues to
questions of larger-scale watershed system health.
Why watershed protection?
A Watershed Protection Approach is a strategy for effectively protecting and
restoring aquatic ecosystems and protecting human health. This strategy has
as its premise that many water quality and ecosystem problems are best
solved at the watershed level rather than at the individual water body or
discharge level. Major features of a Watershed Protection Approach are
targeting priority problems, promoting a high level of stakeholder
involvement, integrated solutions that make use of the expertise and
authority of multiple agencies, and measuring success through monitoring and
other data gathering.
*(from EPA's Introduction to The Watershed Approach).
The Watershed Wheel
The Watershed Address System (broken link)
(this will take you off the EWEC site)
Watershed Activities
For More Information: Online Watershed Resource List
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