Abstract: | Automated stream dosers that deliver a wet slurry of calcite were installed in 1987 on two Maryland Coastal Plain streams subject to acidic pulses during rainstorms to evaluate the use of stream liming technology to maintain suitable water quality for early life stages of anadromous fish. Results of water quality sampling during baseflow conditions and hydrologic events indicated that significant changes in water chemistry occurred at the upstream (untreated) site during elevated flows on each stream. Observed responses in stream chemistry during the events included declines in pH, acid neutralizing capacity (ANC), and Ca, and increases in monomeric Al concentrations. With the addition of calcite, stream chemistry conditions at the downstream (treated) sites during each event were similar to those observed during baseflow. In situ bioassay experiments indicated that survival of yellow perch eggs and newly-hatched larvae may be enhanced by stream liming. |