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St. Joseph River, Indiana
An ARS Benchmark Research Watershed

- Characteristics
St. Joseph River (DeKalb County, IN) - The total drainage area of this basin is approximately 281,000 ha overlapping Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio, emptying into the Maumee River in Ft. Wayne, Indiana (Figure B11, HUC04100003). The area to be evaluated is the Cedar Creek watershed, encompassing 71,000 ha, defined from the point where Cedar Creek empties into the St. Joseph River, just northeast of Ft. Wayne, IN. The majority of this watershed is within DeKalb County, Indiana. Three small sub-watersheds within the Cedar Creek watershed have been selected for detailed monitoring.

The watershed is primarily agricultural, with approximately 64% in cropland and 15% in pasture or forage. Woodlands and wetlands are found on 10%, while the remaining 11% consist of urban, industrial, farmsteads, airports, golf courses, and other land uses. Of the cropland, approximately 54% is in corn, 37% in soybeans, and 9% in wheat. Primary cropping consists of corn-soybean rotations and varying tillage practices. Cultivation practices in DeKalb County from 1990 to 2004 are summarized: (a) corn: 27% No-till, 65% Conventional Till; and 8% Reduced Till; soybean: 67% No-till, 26% Conventional Till, and 7% Reduced Till.

The topography of the watershed varies from rolling hills in Hillsdale, Williams, Noble, and Steuben counties to nearly level plains and closed depressions in DeKalb and Allen counties. The St. Joseph River follows the Fort Wayne moraine, and flows past numerous low bluffs and terraces. This indicates that the river was once much wider and deeper. Much of the St. Joseph River bed is composed of sand and gravel deposits. The average slope of the river’s bottom is 1.6 feet per mile.

Soils in the watershed were formed from compacted glacial till. The predominate soil textures are silt loam, silty clay loam, and clay loam. Soil associations include Miami- Morley, Morley-Glynwood-Blount, and Blount-Pewamo. Erosion and over-saturation are the major soil limitations.

Water balance data (1) for Cedar Creek Watershed include: Annual Rainfall - 39.08 in; annual Runoff - 3.53 in. Hydrological characteristics for Cedar Creek Watershed include discharge data from 1947-2002 (3): Maximum - 5580 cfs; Minimum – na; Mean - 255 cfs; Median – na.
+ Environmental Impacts
+ Management Practices
+ Research Objectives
+ Approaches
+ Selected References
+ Collaborators and Cooperating Agencies and Groups
   
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