Volunteers to Monitor Threats to Water for 15 Million People
Stroud Water Research Center helps citizen scientists worldwide to monitor the health of their streams and rivers. In October 2014, Assistant Director of Education Tara Muenz traveled to Costa Rica's Osa Peninsula to train citizen scientists in watershed monitoring. These volunteers often become leaders in their communities, helping to organize events promoting clean water and watershed stewardship. Photo: Tara MuenzClick here for high-resolution version · Marketwired

AVONDALE, PA--(Marketwired - July 14, 2016) - Citizen-science volunteers will soon monitor the state of threatened water sources for millions of people. Stroud Water Research Center will help guide the effort under a $2.5 million grant from the William Penn Foundation. The goal is to enhance citizen-science volunteer monitoring of water quality in eight regional subwatersheds in the Delaware River basin.

The grant is part of the Delaware River Watershed Initiative, which was initially funded with $35 million in 2014 and then supplemented with additional funding in 2015-2016. More than 50 leading nonprofits are working together through DRWI to reduce threats to water quality for the 15 million people -- more than 5 percent of the U.S. population -- who get their drinking water from the Delaware River basin.

The eight carefully selected subwatersheds, or clusters, make up 25 percent of the Delaware River basin and are of critical ecological value. A science-informed evaluation under DRWI showed that while these clusters face significant threats to water quality, the opportunity for successful intervention is significant at these locations.

Each cluster is comprised of three to 11 organizations jointly implementing restoration or preservation plans. With this new William Penn grant, the Stroud Center will work with these organizations and their partners to grow their network of citizen-science volunteers and enhance the quality and quantity of the data they collect. The Stroud Center will offer similar support to Penn State's Master Watershed Steward Program, which trains volunteers in watershed management so they can educate communities about watershed stewardship and will also evaluate if, and how, the Water Stewards Program can assist in advancing the monitoring capacity of DRWI clusters.

Erin Frederick, the Master Watershed Steward coordinator at Penn State, said, "I'm looking forward to working with the Stroud Center to provide advanced training and volunteer opportunities to our Stewards so they can play a key role in citizen-science water-quality monitoring."

The Stroud Center will work with the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University to ensure that the water-quality monitoring collected by volunteers will help scientists better understand how well watershed restoration and conservation efforts in the Delaware River basin are working to protect clean fresh water.

Over the next 2 years, the Stroud Center will develop and provide professional-level science training to citizen-science volunteers, covering basic watershed ecology and more advanced topics on how to monitor and restore streams and rivers.