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AZ Extension Water Quality ] [ Environment & Natural Resources Program ]

Watershed Management
Program Planning

bulletProgram Identification and Planning
bulletDesired Program Outcomes
bulletProgram Inputs
bulletProgram Outputs
bulletOutcomes & Impacts

 

Program Identification and Planning

Watershed level management requires a perspective that unites social, economic, and environmental concerns in a landscape where upland forests and rangeland, wetlands, and agricultural and urban areas are integrated. An understanding of watershed linkages allows us to design long-term and sustainable solutions to a variety of natural resource problems. Watershed management planning in Arizona must also take into consideration the diversity of land uses: Fifty-three percent of the State's lands are forested, 37 percent is used for crops and livestock, cities use 2 percent, 5 percent of the lands are managed by the State and Federal governments, and 3 percent is in other uses. Watersheds in Arizona differ quite dramatically, as well, ranging from nearly two feet of precipitation a year in Flagstaff and the White Mountains to as little as three inches a year in Yuma and the western corridor.

Watershed workgroups act as decision support systems in local watershed management efforts. These groups bring stakeholders together to develop plans that consider all interests. Many locally-based Arizona Cooperative Extension faculty are actively engaged in these planning processes. The University of Arizona is engaged in research supporting watershed management and provides a range of science-based educational materials addressing land-use management and conservation techniques.

 

Desired Program Outcomes

  • Water quality is protected and/or enhanced
  • Erosion is managed on uplands, riparian areas, and stream channels
  • Stormwater pollution prevention strategies are included in all development plans
  • Citizen involvement in watershed management is increased
  • Citizen awareness and knowledge of watershed management is increased

 

Program Inputs

(1) Funding, both intramural and extramural, is sought for projects.
(2) This program is supported by a 0.5 FTE Extension coordinator.
(3) Technology in the form of the Internet, web pages, listservs, digital cameras, etc. support the program.
(4) Curricula and other educational materials, both created and adapted, support the program.
(5) Partnerships are being explored to extend the program's resources.

 

Program Outputs

2002:
  1. Three (3) groundwater models were purchased to be used with or without the Groundwater Education tabletop booth display and delivered to Yavapai County, Maricopa Agricultural Center, and Yuma Agricultural Center/Statewide Program through an ACES Program Enhancement grant.
  2. Four (4) watershed models were purchased to be used with or without the Surface Water Education tabletop booth display and delivered to Yuma County, Navajo Nation, Maricopa Agricultural Center, and Yuma Agricultural Center/Statewide program through an ACES Program Enhancement grant.
  3. Through an ACES Program Enhancement grant, three (3) booklets were updated and duplicated for a workshop on Water Quality Education Models and Training: Water Quality Educational Materials, Arizona Water Quality Education Activities for Grades 1-12, and Groundwater Flow Demonstration Model Activities for Grades 6-12.
  4. Through an ACES Program Enhancement grant, 7 Arizona Extension professionals learned how to demonstrate various nonpoint source pollution concepts and received water quality resources to augment their county water quality program.
  5. Coordinated statewide efforts for National Water Monitoring Day (18 October 2002). It was celebrated in Arizona as "The Big Dip In." Ten (10) people volunteered to participate in the event: 2 in La Paz county, 3 in Pima County, 2 in Gila County, 1 in Cochise County, 1 in Yavapai County, and 1 on the Hualapai Indian Nation and wrote an article in The Sun (Yuma, AZ newspaper) about National Water Monitoring Day to drum up interest in Yuma county.
  6. Conducted 1-hour workshop for Vo-Ag teachers about integrating water quality concepts into their curriculum.

 

Outcomes and Impacts

2002:
  • Clients in Yavapai county and those of the Maricopa Agricultural Center have a better visual understanding of what groundwater is, mechanisms by which groundwater can be contaminated, and practices that they can perform to reduce their impact on groundwater by the use of the groundwater model.
  • Clients in Yuma County, the Navajo Nation, and Maricopa Agricultural Center have a better visual understanding of nonpoint source pollution through the use of the watershed model.
  • The participants of the Water Quality Education Models and Training workshop are more aware of the various sources and types of audio, video, and written educational materials pertaining to animal waste management, onsite wastewater treatment, safe drinking water, water conservation, and water quality.
  • Through the development of the three booklets, the participants of the Water Quality Education Models and Training workshop know where to obtain educational materials and how much they cost.
  • The participants of the Water Quality Education Models and Training workshop are able to demonstrate water quality concepts using one of three physical models purchased for the project.
  • The participants of the Water Quality Education Models and Training workshop are motivated to use the creative ideas incorporated in the various displays and models to teach others about water quality.
  • The Water Quality Education Models and Training workshop event motivated the P.I. to update previously developed water quality educational materials for dissemination via had copy and the State Extension Water Quality Program Home Page.
  • 11 Vo-Ag teachers in Yuma and La Paz counties have a better awareness and knowledge of how to integrate water quality concepts into their curriculum and resources to assist them in that process.