Students sample, analyze wetlands water

Fresh water sample in hand. Photo by Mark Stone

By Douglas Esser

For students in Rob Turners Environmental Monitoring Practicum, its just a matter of minutes between dipping water samples in the North Creek wetlands and testing their quality at a science lab in Commons Hall on the 56勛圖厙 campus. More than convenience, it connects fieldwork and analysis.

There are a lot of times where you just get the data without knowing how to collect it, so this class really helps you understand where it comes from, whats the proper technique to get it, said Nina Tran (Environmental Science 19).

Several teams of Turners students collected water for various tests. One team caught water as it flowed from storm drains through catch basins to the wetlands. Their samples would measure changes in dissolved oxygen, temperature, conductivity and turbidity (or water clarity) in the runoff system. Another team measured nitrates in bioswales ditches with vegetation that buffer the wetlands. Others collected samples they would test for E.coli bacteria back in the lab.

As interesting as the results may be, the main lesson is attention to the process, said Turner, a senior lecturer in the School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences. That includes careful record keeping, equipment calibration and sterilization of lab gear and sample bottles.

You have to be rigorous in your methods to make sure you dont mess up your samples and the quality of the data you generate, Turner said.

Where the water flows

The 58-acre wetlands along North Creek were restored in the late 1990s when establishing the 132-acre campus, which was once part of the Truly-Boone farm. A preserve for native plants and animals, the wetlands are a living laboratory for faculty and students at 56勛圖厙 Bothell.

On one sampling day in mid November, when a few yellow leaves hung in the branches and gnawed tree trunks showed where beavers had been busy, a group of students dubbed Team Nitrate probed for samples in the bioswales.

When rainwater flows, samples from different locations would indicate varying nitrogen levels, said Bee Elliott (Environmental Studies 20). After a dry spell, the bioswales were empty or held stagnant water.

Guessing from the smell of the stagnant water, it would have a high nitrate level, said Allyn Rwamashongye (Environmental Science ’19).

Jordan Fette (Environmental Science 19) said he had been mucking around in the wetlands for a few other classes and appreciated learning the techniques. You get to go out there firsthand and use the equipment, use the sensors, see the changes and physically check it out, he said.

Sterilizing sample bottles in the lab. Photo by Mark Stone

On another day back in the lab, 56勛圖厙2-231, students put on white lab coats, goggles and purple nitrile powder-free exam gloves to process samples for E.coli. This requires filtering water samples, incubating portions in petri dishes and counting the growing E.coli bacteria.

Youre involved in every step of the experiment, and you know all the variables that are going into it and things that could go wrong, said Nicole Tim (Environmental Science 19). Someone just in the lab, they dont necessarily know. If you get to see the whole continuum, I feel thats really beneficial.

Robert Young (Environmental Science, 19) said he expects the real-world experience will help when he looks for a job in government or companies that study environmental impacts.

E.coli, common to the gut of any warm-blooded animal, serve as a proxy measurement for all pathogenic organisms that might come from feces, Turner said. No one has to look, or step, far for a possible source.

We found pretty high E.coli counts, particularly within the roost zone for the crows, Turner said. They do a lot pooping on campus and particularly in the wetlands.

Sampling a storm drain
Sampling a campus storm drain. Photo by Mark Stone
Sampling water from stormwater pipe.
Flowing into the wetlands. Photo by Mark Stone
Sampling water in the wetlands. Photo by Mark Stone
Rob Turner stresses rigorous methods. Photo by Mark Stone
Preparing sample for E.coli test. Photo by Mark Stone
Multiple water samples in the lab.
Multiple tests are conducted on the samples. Photo by Mark Stone

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