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March 27, 2025

The research will inform conservation planning for aquatic plants and mussels

Clinton, Iowa—The U.S. Geological Survey, in collaboration with Iowa Department of Natural Resources and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, will place monitoring equipment this week at several locations in Pool 13 of the Upper Mississippi River between Bulger’s Hollow Recreation Area and Lock and Dam 13 in Clinton, Iowa. The equipment will be placed below the water surface to monitor waves and water clarity from early April through mid-September.

 

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Two people hold up a metal frame while standing on a boat at the edge of the river
Staff prepare to place the deployment structure with monitoring equipment into the river to measure waves and sediment resuspension. Deployment structures will be near the surface of the water and will be marked with buoys to alert boaters. The staff wear flotation jackets to keep them safe during cold weather field work on the water. (Kristen Bouska, USGS).

Orange buoys will mark locations where monitoring instruments have been placed. The equipment is sensitive, and the public is asked to avoid these locations so as not to disturb the research project. Hunting, fishing and recreational activities are not restricted near monitoring locations, but the public should not tamper with or disturb monitoring equipment and should be careful navigating around buoys. Public assistance to report unexpected events, damaged property or suspicious activity around the monitoring equipment is greatly appreciated. Local, state and federal officials have been informed about the placement of this equipment.

 

Scientists will use the data collected in Pool 13 to better understand how waves affect water clarity and the river’s ecosystem, including native freshwater mussels and aquatic plants like wild celery. The results can inform rehabilitation efforts in Pool 13 and elsewhere on the Mississippi River.

 

Please relay questions or concerns to Kristen Bouska, USGS Research Ecologist, at 608-781-6344 or kbouska@usgs.gov, or Nicole Buckley, USGS Physical Scientist, at nbuckley@usgs.gov.

 

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Wild celery, a stringy green aquatic plant growing in the water
Wild celery in lower Pool 13. (Kristen Bouska, USGS)
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Measuring mussel.
A mussel is measured during a survey on the Mississippi River. (Kathy Bibby, USGS).
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An orange buoy marked with USGS in a river, with the distant shore visible in the background
A buoy marks the location of equipment during the 2024 monitoring season. (Kristen Bouska, USGS)

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The USGS provides science for a changing world. Learn more at www.usgs.gov or follow us on Facebook @USGeologicalSurvey, YouTube @USGS, Instagram @USGS, or X @USGS.  

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