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Fall Salt Pollution Stream Snapshot

October 1 October 15 EDT

TTF Watershed Partnership volunteers logging winter salt stream snapshot samples.
Tookany/Tacony-Frankford (TTF) Watershed Partnership Upstream Conservation Leader Ryan Neuman, along with volunteers Geoffrey Selling, Ethan Simon, Richard Getz, and Patricia Hendrick-Emore, participated in 2025 Winter Salt Week to monitor the impact of road salt on local waterways. With support from Stroud Water Research Center, the team collected data on chloride and conductivity levels on Rock Creek and Baeder Creek, two major tributaries to the Tookany. Photos: Wendi Lu, TTF Watershed Partnership on Flickr.

Want to Get Involved in Community Science?

Stroud Water Research Center is planning a community science stream monitoring event this fall. Water sampling will assess salt pollution levels and patterns in streams and rivers, helping researchers and community members better understand how road salt accumulates across different landscapes. 

The intention for this fall event will be to sample during baseflow conditions when water levels are stable and not influenced by storm runoff (i.e., when the water in the stream is originating from groundwater/water table) within a two-week sample window (October 1–15).

The salt snapshot provides a unique, hands-on opportunity to generate data illustrating that road salt contaminates our watersheds year-round. This data will help start local conversations and shine a public spotlight on this critical water quality issue. The level of road salt contamination highly depends on how much road salt private applicators and municipalities use and how they handle it. Therefore, local data are a vital part of the conversation.  

To get involved:

Questions? Please get in touch with Community Science Facilitator David Bressler at dbressler@stroudcenter.org

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Free