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  2. Drinking water quality standards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drinking_water_quality...

    Drinking water quality standards describes the quality parameters set for drinking water. Water may contain many harmful constituents, yet there are no universally recognized and accepted international standards for drinking water. Even where standards do exist, the permitted concentration of individual constituents may vary by as much as ten ...

  3. Drinking water quality in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drinking_water_quality_in...

    The Safe Drinking Water Act requires the US EPA to set standards for drinking water quality in public water systems (entities that provide water for human consumption to at least 25 people for at least 60 days a year). [3] Enforcement of the standards is mostly carried out by state health agencies. [4]

  4. Water quality modelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_quality_modelling

    Water quality modeling also helps determine correlations to constituent sources and water quality along with identifying information gaps. [2] Due to the increase in freshwater usage among people, water quality modeling is especially relevant [3] both in a local level and global level. In order to understand and predict the changes over time in ...

  5. Total maximum daily load - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_maximum_daily_load

    Beneficial use determinations must have sufficient credible water quality data for TMDL planning. Throughout the U.S., data are often lacking adequate spatial or temporal coverage to reliably establish the sources and magnitude of water quality degradation. TMDL planning in large watersheds is a process that typically involves the following steps:

  6. Water quality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_quality

    The National Water Quality Inventory Report to Congress is a general report on water quality, providing overall information about the number of miles of streams and rivers and their aggregate condition. [65] The CWA requires states to adopt standards for each of the possible designated uses that they assign to their waters.

  7. Biological monitoring working party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_monitoring...

    The biological monitoring working party (BMWP) is a procedure for measuring water quality using families of macroinvertebrates as biological indicators. [1]The method is based on the principle that different aquatic invertebrates have different tolerances to pollutants.

  8. National Hydrography Dataset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Hydrography_Dataset

    Using the basic water features, flow network, linked information, and other characteristics, it is possible to study cause and effect relationships, such as how a source of poor water quality upstream might affect a fish population downstream. The NHD is part of the United States Geological Survey The National Map for the United States.

  9. Water quality law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_quality_law

    Water quality laws govern the protection of water resources for human health and the environment. Water quality laws are legal standards or requirements governing water quality, that is, the concentrations of water pollutants in some regulated volume of water. Such standards are generally expressed as levels of a specific water pollutants ...