January 1993 - January 1995 Quick Bibliography Series: QB 95-10 (Updates QB 93-31) 127 citations from AGRICOLA Joe Makuch Water Quality Information Center Quick Bibliography Series Bibliographies in the Quick Bibliography series of the National Agricultural Library (NAL), are intended primarily for current awareness, and as the title of the series implies, are not in-depth and exhaustive. However, the citations are a substantial resource for recent investigations on a given topic. They also serve the purpose of bringing the literature of agriculture to the interested user who, in many cases, could not access it by any other means. The bibliographies are derived from online searches of the AGRICOLA database. Timeliness of topic and evidence of extensive interest are the selection criteria. Send suggestions for Quick Bibliography on water-related topics to wqic@nalusda.gov The author/searcher determines the purpose, length, and search strategy of the Quick Bibliography. Information regarding these is available from the author/searcher. The inclusion or omission of a particular publication or citation should not be construed as endorsement or disapproval. An author and subject index is provided. PLEASE NOTE: Information on document delivery services,interlibrary loan requests and copyright restrictions is appended to this bibiiography. If Quick Bibliography files are copied and/or distributed, please include this information in all copies. ************************************************************** Regulating Water Quality: Policy, Standards and Laws 1 NAL Call. No.: ArUKF5624.A75C66 1992 7th Annual Conference on Wetlands and the Law course materials. American Bar Association, Section of Natural Resources, Energy, and Environmental Law, American Bar Association, Water Quality Committee, Environmental Law Institute Conference on Wetlands Law and Regulation 7th : 1992 : Washington, D.C. Chicago, Ill. : American Bar Association : 1002 [i.e.; 1992. 1 v. (various pagings) : ill., maps ; 28 cm. June 3-4, 1002 [i.e. 1992], Capital Hilton Hotel, Washington, D.C. Language: English; English Descriptors: Wetlands; Wetland conservation 2 NAL Call. No.: TD420.A1P7 Agricultural and munipal use of wastewater. Bouwer, H. Oxford : Pergamon Press; 1992. Water science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control v. 26 (7/8): p. 1583-1591; 1992. In the series analytic: Water Quality International '92. Part 4 / edited by M. Suzuki, et al. Proceedings of the Sixtennth Biennial Conference of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control, held May 24-30, 1992, Washington, D.C. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Refuse; Waste water treatment; Water reuse; Irrigation water; Water quality; Quality standards 3 NAL Call. No.: GB1001.G76 Agricultural chemical news: apparent shift in EPA's ground water policy. Cohen, S. Dublin, OH : Ground Water Pub. Co., c1993-; 1994. Ground water monitoring & remediation v. 14 (3): p. 97-98; 1994. Language: English Descriptors: Pesticides; Groundwater; Water policy; Groundwater pollution; Monitoring; Environmental legislation; Federal government; State government 4 NAL Call. No.: aTD428.A37M34 1992 Agricultural nonpoint source pollution and economic incentive policies issues in the reauthorization of the Clean Water Act : water quality. Malik, Arun S.; Larson, Bruce A.; Ribaudo, Marc United States, Dept. of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, Resources and Technology Division Washington, DC : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, Resources and Technology Division,; 1992. iv, 14 p. ; 28 cm. (ERS staff report ; no. AGES 9229.). Cover title. "November 1992"--P. iii. Includes bibliographical references (p. 12-14). Language: English Descriptors: Agricultural pollution; Water 5 NAL Call. No.: TD195.A34B34 1991 Agriculture and the polluter pays principle a study of six EC countries. Baldock, David; Bennett, Graham London : Institute for European Environmental Policy,; 1991. 231 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm. "December 1991,"--T.p. verso. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English Descriptors: Agricultural pollution; Water; Liability for water pollution damages 6 NAL Call. No.: 57.8 So4 Agriculture targeted in debate over Clean Water Act. Myrick, C. St. Louis, Mo. : Solutions Magazine; 1993 Jul. Solutions : journal of the fluid fertilizer industry v. 37 (5): p. 42-43; 1993 Jul. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Agricultural chemicals; Environmental legislation; Water pollution; Pollution control 7 NAL Call. No.: KF3790.F74 1993 Air and water pollution regulation accomplishments and economic consequences. Freedman, Martin; Jaggi, Bikki Westport, Conn. : Quorum Books,; 1993. xii, 266 p. : ill. ; 25 cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. Language: English; English Descriptors: Water; Air; Law 8 NAL Call. No.: TD171.U5 Amending the Safe Drinking Water Act: view from Congress. Waxman, H. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; 1994. EPA journal v. 20 (1/2): p. 32-33; 1994. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Drinking water; Legislation; Water quality; Contamination 9 NAL Call. No.: 275.29 T313 Animal waste management. Sweeten, J.M.; Baird, C.; Manning, L. College Station, Tex. : The Service; 1991 Sep. Leaflet L - Texas Agricultural Extension Service, Texas A & M University System (5043): 4 p.; 1991 Sep. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Texas; Animal wastes; Feedlots; Dairy farms; Waste disposal; Regulation; Runoff; Water pollution; Water quality 10 NAL Call. No.: TD427.T7A77 1988 Arsenic water quality standards criteria summaries a compilation of state/federal criteria.. Water quality standards criteria summaries United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water Regulations and Standards, Criteria and Standards Division, Standards Branch, Battelle Memorial Institute Washington, D.C. : U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ; Springfield, VA : distributed by NTIS,; 1988. 57 p. ; 28 cm. Cover title. Contract 68-03-3534. "Office of Water Regulation and Standards"--Cover. September 1988. EPA 440/5-88/018. PB89-141501. Includes bibliographical references (p. 4-6). Language: English Descriptors: Arsenic wastes; Water quality; Water 11 NAL Call. No.: HD1401.S75 Atrazine and water quality: an updated CEEPES analysis. Ames, Iowa : Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, 1986-; 1992 Dec. Staff report / (59): 49 p.; 1992 Dec. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Corn belt states of U.S.A.; Cabt; Zea mays; Sorghum; Atrazine; Water quality; Crop yield; Application rates 12 NAL Call. No.: 47.8 W89 Avoiding pollution from poultry manure. Archer, J. Oxford : Butterworth-Heinenmann Ltd; 1993 Jul. World's poultry science journal v. 49 (2): p. 167-170; 1993 Jul. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Uk; Cabt; Poultry manure; Nitrates; Surface water; Water pollution; Groundwater pollution; Air pollution; Odors; Legislation 13 NAL Call. No.: TD196.O76C36 1992 Canadian water quality guidelines for organotins. Moore, D. R. G. Canada, Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate, Canada, Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate,Eco-Health Branch Ottawa, Ont. : Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate, Eco-Health Branch,; 1992. vii, 145 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. (Scientific series (Canada. Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate) ; no. 191.). Summary in French. Errata sheet inserted. At head of title: Environment Canada, Conservation and Protection. Includes bibliographical references (p. 31-40). Language: English Descriptors: Water quality monitoring; Organotin compounds 14 NAL Call. No.: TD226.C388 1992 Canadian water quality guidelines for triallate. Kent, R. A.; Trotter, D. M.; Gareau, J. Canada, Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate, Eco-health Branch, Canada, Conservation and Protection Ottawa, Ont. : Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate, Eco-Health Branch,; 1992. v, 47 p. ; 28 cm. (Scientific series (Canada. Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate) ; no. 195.). Abstract also in French. First draft prepared under contract by: D.M. Trotter and J. Gareau. At head of title: Environment Canada, Conservation and Protection. Includes bibliographical references (p. 15-19). Language: English; English Descriptors: Water quality management; Herbicides; Water quality 15 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 C1282 Changing practices in ground water management--the pros and cons of regulation. Riverside, Calif. : The Center; 1992 Sep. Report - California Water Resources Center, University of California (77): 205 p.; 1992 Sep. Proceedings of the 18th biennial conference on ground water, held September 16-17, 1991, Sacramento, California. Language: English Descriptors: California; Kansas; Arkansas; Arizona; Groundwater; Water management; Regulations; Groundwater pollution; State government; Federal government; Water quality; Wells; Nitrates 16 NAL Call. No.: TD171.U5 The Clean Water Act: has it worked? We have a long way to go. Adler, R. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; 1994. EPA journal v. 20 (1/2): p. 10-14; 1994. Language: English Descriptors: Water pollution; Water quality; Legislation; Environmental protection; Water recreation; Drinking water; Pollutants; Fish; Shellfish; Food contamination; Wetlands 17 NAL Call. No.: Q225.I7 Cleaner water, but not clean enough. Foran, J.A.; Adler, R.W. Richardson, TX : The University of Texas at Dall as; 1993-1994. Issues in science and technology v. 10 (2): p. 33-39; 1993-1994. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Water quality; Environmental legislation; Water pollution; Pollution control 18 NAL Call. No.: TD403.G7 Common sense in ground-water protection and management in the United States. LeGrand, H.E.; Rosen, L. Dublin, Ohio : Ground Water Pub. Co; 1992 Nov. Ground water v. 30 (6): p. 867-872; 1992 Nov. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Groundwater pollution; Protection; Management; Legislation; Policy 19 NAL Call. No.: HD1775.A2A5 Compliance with environmental regulations protecting water quality. Molnar, J.J.; Van Woerkum, C.M.J.; Perez, K. Auburn, Ala. : The Service; 1992. Alabama agribusiness - Auburn University, Alabama Cooperative Extension Service v. 31 (1): p. 9-10; 1992. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Netherlands; Water quality; Animal wastes; Animal manures; Environmental legislation; Intensive livestock farming 20 NAL Call. No.: SB610.W39 Computer models for fate assessment during the registration process: data needs. Behl, E. Champaign, Ill. : The Society; 1992 Jul. Weed technology : a journal of the Weed Science Society of America v. 6 (3): p. 696-700; 1992 Jul. Paper presented at a Symposium on the, "Role of Modeling in Regulatory Affairs," at the Weed Science Society of America, February 4, 1991, Louisville, Kentucky. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Pesticides; Registration; Simulation models; Groundwater; Water quality 21 NAL Call. No.: TD420.W374 Contrasting problems of implementing European Community water protection zone policies in Ireland and the UK. Foster, I.D.L.; Thorn, R.H. London : The Institution of Water and Environmental Management; 1993 Feb. Water and environmental management v. 7 (1): p. 62-67; 1993 Feb. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Uk; Irish republic; Water pollution; Prevention; Nitrates; Pollution control; Policy; Legislation; European communities Abstract: The 1991 EC nitrate Directive has significant implications for agricultural and pollution prevention enforcement agencies throughout the European Community. Contrasting physical backgrounds. water supply sources and leaching rates, together with pre-existing nationally-based pollution control policies, means that implementing the Directive will cause different problems for member states. This paper examines the contrasting physical and legislative backgrounds in Ireland and the UK and looks at some of the problems in implementing EC policy. 22 NAL Call. No.: TD433.C67 1992 The Cost of compliance with the proposed federal drinking water standards for radionuclides final report.. Cost of compliance--radionuclides RCG/Hagler, Bailly, Inc, American Water Works Association, Water Industry Technical Action Panel Denver, CO : Water Industry Technical Action Fund, American Water Works Association,; 1991. 1 v. (various pagings) : ill. ; 28 cm. Spine title: Cost of compliance--radionuclides. Prepared for American Water Works Association, Water Industry Technical Action Panel. October 10, 1991. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English; English Descriptors: Drinking water; Radioactive pollution of water; Radon; Radium; Uranium 23 NAL Call. No.: 44.8 J822 Dairy manure and plant nutrient management issues affecting water quality and the dairy industry. Lanyon, L.E. Champaign, Ill. : American Dairy Science Association; 1994 Jul. Journal of dairy science v. 77 (7): p. 1999-2007; 1994 Jul. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Cattle manure; Water pollution; Pollution control; Dairy farms; Cattle feeding; Production costs; Environmental policy Abstract: Specific requirements for dairy manure management to protect water quality from nutrient pollution depend on the organization of individual farms. Further, the management requirements and options are different for point (farmstead) and nonpoint (field-applied) sources of pollution from farms. A formal management process can guide decisions about existing crop nutrient utilization potential, provide a framework for tracking nutrients supplied to crops, and identify future requirements for dairy manure management to protect water quality. Farm managers can use the process to plan daily activities, to assess annual nutrient management performance, and to chart future requirements as herd size increases. Agronomic measures of nutrient balance and tracking of inputs and outputs for various farm management units can provide the quantitative basis for management to allocate better manure to fields, to modify dairy rations, or to develop alternatives to on-farm manure application. Changes in agricultural production since World War II have contributed to a shift from land-based dairy production to a reliance on capital factors of production supplied by the dairy industry. Meanwhile, management of dairy manure to meet increasingly stringent water quality protection requirements is still a land-based activity. Involving the dairy industry and off-farm stakeholders as participants in the management process for field, farm, and regional dairy production can be the basis for decision-making to reconcile the sometimes conflicting demands of production and water quality protection. 24 NAL Call. No.: KF27.P8968 1992d DeLauro-Lowey Water Pollution Control and Estuary Restoration Financing Act hearing before the Subcommittee on Water Resources of the Committee on Public Works and Transportation, House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, second session, on H.R. 5070, to amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to provide special funding to states for implementation of natinal estuary conservation and management plans, and for other purposes, October 13, 1992 in Milford, CT.. DeLauro Lowey Water Pollution Control and Estuary Restoration Financing Act United States. Congress. House. Committee on Public Works and Transportation. Subcommittee on Water Resources Washington : U.S. G.P.O. : For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office,; 1992; Y 4.P 96/11:102-87. xxvii, 185 p. ; 24 cm. Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. Shipping list no.: 93-0142-P. 102-87. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English Descriptors: Estuaries; Estuarine pollution; Estuarine area conservation 25 NAL Call. No.: TD224.C3D45 1991 Delta water quality a report to the Legislature on trihalomethanes and the quality of drinking water available from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. California, State Water Resources Control Board Sacramento : The Board,; 1991. viii, 41, 4 p. : maps ; 28 cm. October 1991. Language: English; English Descriptors: Water quality; Drinking water; Trihalomethanes 26 NAL Call. No.: TD420.A1P7 Determining tradeoffs between water quality and profitability in agricultural production: implications for nonpoint source pollution policy. Contant, C.K.; Duffy, M.D.; Holub, M.A. Oxford ; New York : Pergamon Press, c1981-; 1993. Water science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research v. 28 (3/5): p. 27-34; 1993. Paper presented at the IAWQ First International Conference on "Diffuse (Nonpoint) Pollution: Sources, Prevention, Impact, Abatement." September 19-24, 1993, Chicago, Illinois. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Iowa; Cabt; Water pollution; Sources; Agricultural production; Water quality 27 NAL Call. No.: HC79.E5E5 Development of a decision support system for prioritization of multimedia dischargers. Keyes, A.M.; Palmer, R.N. New York, N.Y. : Springer-Verlag; 1993 Sep. Environmental management v. 17 (5): p. 601-612; 1993 Sep. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Water pollution; Air pollution; Hazards; Wastes; Risk; Environmental protection; Government organizations; Regulations; Environmental impact 28 NAL Call. No.: 292.8 W295 Economic and environmental impacts of water quality protection policies. 1. Framework for regional analysis. Bernardo, D.J.; Mapp, H.P.; Sabbagh, G.J.; Geleta, S.; Watkins, K.B.; Elliott, R.L.; Stone, J.F. Washington : American Geophysical Union, 1965-; 1993 Sep. Water resources research v. 29 (9): p. 3069-3079; 1993 Sep. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Groundwater pollution; Groundwater; Water quality; Water policy; Agricultural chemicals; Agricultural production; Economic impact; Environmental impact; Simulation models; Mathematical models; Programming; Models Abstract: Agricultural production systems provide some unique challenges for assessing the regional impacts of water quality protection policies. A modeling framework is proposed for assessing the environmental and economic consequences of groundwater quality protection policies at the regional level. The model consists of three components: (1) a crop simulation/chemical transport model, (2) a regional economic optimization model, and (3) an aquifer groundwater flow model. The three submodels are linked and run recursively to simulate producer response to alternative water quality policies over a multiple-year time horizon. Model solutions provide projections of production practices employed on various resource situations across the region. Economic evaluation of alternative policies may be based upon regional agricultural income, crop production levels, input use, and changes in aquifer water levels over time. Measures of agricultural nonpoint source pollution provided by the model include nitrate, phosphorus and pesticide loadings in deep percolation and runoff water, as well as sediment losses. 29 NAL Call. No.: 292.8 W295 Economic and environmental impacts of water quality protection policies. 2. Application to the Central High Plains. Bernardo, D.J.; Mapp, H.P.; Sabbagh, G.J.; Geleta, S.; Watkins, K.B.; Elliott, R.L.; Stone, J.F. Washington : American Geophysical Union, 1965-; 1993 Sep. Water resources research v. 29 (9): p. 3081-3091; 1993 Sep. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Oklahoma; Cabt; Kansas; Cabt; Texas; Cabt; New Mexico; Cabt; Colorado; Cabt; Groundwater pollution; Groundwater; Water quality; Water policy; Agricultural chemicals; Agricultural production; Economic impact; Environmental impact; Mathematical models; Programming; Simulation models; Models Abstract: A three-stage modeling framework is applied to evaluate the potential economic and environmental impacts of agricultural groundwater protection policies in the Central High Plains Region. Three alternative policies (limitations on total nitrogen applications, limitations on unit-area nitrogen applications, and restrictions on the use of selected herbicides) are compared to a baseline scenario that reflects the absence of any form of groundwater quality protection measures. In general, nitrogen restrictions are more effective in reducing nitrate loadings in percolation water if implemented on a unit-area basis rather than as a total (farm level) restriction. In contrast, the total restriction is more effective in controlling runoff losses of nitrogen. Both nitrogen restrictions have significant impacts on crop production levels and regional agricultural income, while the economic consequences of the pesticide restriction are much less pronounced. The proposed regional modeling framework provides critical information necessary to assess the economic and environmental tradeoffs of policy alternatives aimed at controlling agricultural nonpoint source pollution. 30 NAL Call. No.: S544.3.N6N62 Economic impacts of the Water Supply Watershed Protection Act. Cox, U.N.; Jennings, G.; Danielson, L.E.; Hogg, D.L. Raleigh : North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service,; 1993 Sep. AG (473-8): 7 p.; 1993 Sep. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: North Carolina; Cabt; Watersheds; Water resources; Drinking water; Water quality; Waterways; Water pollution; Protection; Regulations; Land use; Residential areas; Industrialization; Economic impact 31 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 Am34 Economic incentives for agricultural nonpoint source pollution control. Malik, A.S.; Larson, B.A.; Ribaudo, M. Herndon, Va. : American Water Resources Association; 1994 May. Water resources bulletin v. 30 (3): p. 471-480; 1994 May. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Water pollution; Pollution control; Environmental legislation; Incentives; Economic policy Abstract: The limited success of command-and-control policies for reducing nonpoint source (NPS) water pollution mandated under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (FWPCA) has prompted increased interest in economic incentive policies as an alternative control mechanism. A variety of measures have been proposed ranging from fairly minor modifications of existing policies to substantial revisions including watershed-wide polices that rely on economic incentives. While greater use of economic incentive policies, such as environmental bonds and point/nonpoint source trading is being advocated in the reauthorization of the CWA, the expected effects of individual proposals will be modest. The characteristics of NPS pollution, namely uncertainty and asymmetrical information, underscores that there is no single, ideal policy instrument for controlling the many types of agricultural NPS water pollution. Some of the usual incentive-based policies, such as effluent taxes, are not well suited to the task. Individual incentive policies proposed for the reauthorized CWA, such as pollution trading or deposit/refund systems, are not broadly applicable for heterogeneous pollution situations. Economic incentive policies may be appropriate in some cases, and command-and-control policies will be preferable in others and may in fact complement incentive policies. 32 NAL Call. No.: TX501.R48 EEC water quality objectives for chemicals dangerous to aquatic environments (List 1). New York : Springer-Verlag, 1987-; 1994. Reviews of environmental contamination and toxicology v. 137: p. 83-110; 1994. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Chemicals; Water quality; Guidelines; Policy; European communities 33 NAL Call. No.: 475 J824 Environmental Protection Agency and other methods for the determination of priority pesticides and their transformation products in water. Barcelo, D. Amsterdam : Elsevier Science Publishers; 1993 Jul23. Journal of chromatography v. 643 (1/2): p. 117-143; 1993 Jul23. Literature review. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Europe; Pesticide residues; Water pollution; Determination; Regulations; Chromatography; European communities 34 NAL Call. No.: QD1.A45 Environmental restoration and separation science. Reed, D.T.; Tasker, I.R.; Cunnane, J.C.; Vandegrift, G.F. Washington, D.C. : American Chemical Society, 1974-; 1992. ACS symposium series (509): p. 1-19; 1992. In the series analytic: Environmental remediation: Removing organic and metal ion pollutants / edited by G.F. Vandegrift, D.T. Reed and I.R. Tasker. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Soil pollution; Groundwater pollution; Reclamation; Separation; Wastes; Radioactive wastes; Regulations; Technology; Literature reviews Abstract: The problem of environmental restoration, specifically the cleanup of contaminated soils and groundwaters, is one of the most important technical and societal problems we face today. To provide a background to this problem, the extent and cost, laws and regulations, important contaminants, and key issues in environmental restoration are discussed. A brief introduction to the role of separation science, in relation to environmental restoration, is also given. 35 NAL Call. No.: 57.8 C734 EPA releases final sludge management rule. Goldstein, N. Emmaus, Pa. : J.G. Press; 1993 Jan. BioCycle v. 34 (1): p. 59-63; 1993 Jan. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Sewage sludge; Federal government; Regulations; Public health; Pollutants; Pathogens; Water policy; Wetlands; Application rates 36 NAL Call. No.: KF27.G655 1991d EPA's efforts to control the nation's worst toxic water pollution problems : hearing before the Environment, Energy, and Natural Resources Subcommittee of the Committee on Government Operations, House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, first session, July 25, 1991. United States. Congress. House. Committee on Government Operations. Environment, Energy, and Natural Resources Subcommittee Washington : U.S. G.P.O. : For sale by the G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office,; 1992; Y 4.G 74/7:T 66/8. iii, 284 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. Shipping list no.: 93-0161-P. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English Descriptors: Water; Hazardous wastes; Polllution control industry 37 NAL Call. No.: 302.8 T162 EPA's proposed cluster rule: the end of end-of-pipe. Hinsey, N.W. Norcross, Ga. : The Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry; 1994 Sep. Tappi journal. -- v. 77 (9): p. 65-74; 1994 Sep. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Pulp and paper industry; Air pollution; Water pollution; Pollution control; Public agencies; Pulp mill effluent; Factory fumes 38 NAL Call. No.: 302.8 P11 EPA's proposed cluster rules shape U.S. paper industry's near future. Nichols, B. San Francisco, Calif. : Miller Freeman Inc; 1994 Sep. Pulp & paper v. 68 (9): p. 75-76, 81-82, 85; 1994 Sep. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Pulp and paper industry; Air pollutants; Pollutants; Environmental legislation; Federal government 39 NAL Call. No.: 56.8 J822 Factors affecting attitudes toward groundwater pollution among Ohio farmers. Napier, T.L.; Brown, D.E. Ankeny, Iowa : Soil Conservation Society of America, 1946-; 1993 Sep. Journal of soil and water conservation v. 48 (5): p. 432-439; 1993 Sep. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Ohio; Cabt; Groundwater pollution; Farmers' attitudes; Learning theory; Farm management; Innovation adoption; Agricultural policy; Farm structure; Models; Agricultural chemicals; Health hazards; Knowledge; Perception 40 NAL Call. No.: 275.29 W27P Farming practices for groundwater protection. Adams, E.B. Pullman, Wash. : The Service; 1992 Aug. Extension bulletin - Washington State University, Cooperative Extension Service (1716): 4 p.; 1992 Aug. In subseries: Clean water for Washington. Language: English Descriptors: Washington; Groundwater pollution; Water conservation; Agricultural wastes; Waste disposal; Cultural methods; Environmental legislation 41 NAL Call. No.: 99.8 F768 Forest water quality protection: a comparison of regulatory and voluntary programs. Hawks, L.J.; Cubbage, F.W.; Haney, H.L. Jr; Shaffer, R.M.; Newman, D.H. Bethesda, Md. : Society of American Foresters; 1993 May. Journal of forestry v. 91 (5): p. 48-54; 1993 May. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Maryland; Virginia; Forests; Water quality; Legislation; Resource conservation 42 NAL Call. No.: KK6251.L56 1993 Gewassserschutz und landwirtschaftliche Bodennutzung dargestellt am Beispiel der Dungung unter besonderer Berucksichtigung der Nitratproblematik [Protection of water and agricultural soil use]. Linden, Werner, Heidelberg : R. v. Decker,; 1993. xii, 273 p. ; 22 cm. (Umwelt- und Technikrecht ; Bd. 19). Originally presented as the author's thesis--Universitat Trier, 1993. Includes bibliographical references (p. 257-273). Language: German Descriptors: Water pollution; Agricultural pollution; Fertilizers 43 NAL Call. No.: TD171.U5 Great water bodies at a watershed. Marx, W. Washington, D.C. : U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; 1992 Sep. EPA journal v. 18 (4): p. 45-47; 1992 Sep. Language: English Descriptors: Pennsylvania; Maryland; Virginia; Watersheds; Body water; Water pollution; Environmental degradation; Environmental protection; Environmental policy 44 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 C1282 Ground water pollution update: causes and implications of slow remediation. Kopania, A.A.; Mackay, D.M. Riverside, Calif. : The Center; 1992 Sep. Report - California Water Resources Center, University of California (77): p. 57-62; 1992 Sep. In the series analytic: Changing practices in ground water management--the pros and cons of regulation. Proceedings of the 18th biennial conference on ground water, held September 16-17, 1991, Sacramento, California. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: California; Groundwater pollution; Organic compounds; Geology; Aquifers; Wells; Regulations; Water management 45 NAL Call. No.: SB321.G85 A guide for understanding the atrazine ground and surface water risk reduction measures. Storrs, Conn. : Coop. Ext. Serv., USDA, College of Agriculture & Natural Resources, Univ. of Conn; 1993 Apr. The Grower : vegetable and small fruit newsletter v. 93 (4): p. 8-12; 1993 Apr. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Atrazine; Water pollution; Application rates; Pollution control; Regulations 46 NAL Call. No.: TD171.5.G3S33 1992 Handbuch Umwelt, Technik, Recht Luftreinhaltung, Abfallwirschaft, Gewasserschutz, Larmschutz, Umweltschutzbeauftragte, EG-Umweltrecht [Handbook on environment, technology, law]., 2., vollig neubearbeitete Aufl.. Schedler, Karl Ehningen bei Boblingen : Expert Verlag,; 1992. 679 p. : ill., maps ; 21 cm. (Expert Bucherei). Includes bibliographical references (p. 624-668) and index. Language: German Descriptors: Environmental protection; Environmental law; Air quality management; Refuse and refuse disposal; Water quality management; Noise control 47 NAL Call. No.: HD9000.6.A1S88 Bd.1 Handelbare Emissionsrechte als Instrument zur Reduzierung der Nitratbelastung des Grundwassers durch die Landwirtschaft [Negotiable emissions rights as an instrument for reducing nitrate contamination of ground water by agriculture]., 1. Aufl.. Niedermeyer, Dirk Witterschlick, Bonn : Wehle,; 1989. viii, 149 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. (Studien zur Wirschafts- und Agrarpolitik ; Bd. 1). Includes bibliographical references (p. 140-149). Language: German Descriptors: Nitrates; Water, underground; Agricultural pollution 48 NAL Call. No.: TD201.U61 How clean is clean? An agricultural perspective. Swader, F. Carbondale, Ill. : The Council,; 1994. Water resources update / (94): p. 61-67; 1994. Special Issue: The Clean Water Act Revisited: Accomplishments and Issues for Reauthorization. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Water quality; Water pollution; Agriculture; Environmental policy; Agricultural policy; Usda 49 NAL Call. No.: 275.29 Ok41C How do we improve water quality in the Illinois River basin?. Stillwater, Okla. : The Service,; 1994 Apr. Circular / (E-933): 12 p.; 1994 Apr. Language: English Descriptors: Illinois; Cabt; Water quality; Water pollution; Polluted water; Pollutants; Sources; Wastes; Waste disposal; Water erosion; Pollution by tourism; Recreation; Prevention; Law enforcement; Education 50 NAL Call. No.: 290.9 Am32P Impact of water quality laws on dairy profitability. Leatham, D.J.; Schmucker, J.F.; Lacewell, R.D.; Schwart, R.B.; Lovell, A.; Allen, G. St. Joseph, Mich. : American Society of Agricultural Engineers,; 1991. Paper / (914019): 11 p.; 1991. Paper presented at the "1991 International Summer Meeting sponsored by the American Society of Agricultural Engineers," June 23-26, 1991, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Texas; Cabt; Dairy wastes; Waste water; Runoff; Water quality; Legislation 51 NAL Call. No.: 290.9 Am32P Impacts of agricultural chemical policies on groundwater quantity. Sabbagh, G.J.; Mapp, H.P.; Stone, J.F.; Geleta, S.; Bernardo, D.J.; Elliott, R.L.; Watkins, K.B. St. Joseph, Mich. : American Society of Agricultural Engineers,; 1992. Paper / (922024): 23 p.; 1992. Paper presented at the "1992 International Summer Meeting sponsored by the American Society of Agricultural Engineers," June 21-24, 1992, Charlotte, North Carolina. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Groundwater; Water quality; Chemicals 52 NAL Call. No.: S494.5.S86S8 Impacts of uncertainty on policy costs of managing nonpoint source ground water contamination. Halstead, J.M.; Batie, S.S.; Taylor, D.B.; Heatwole, C.D.; Diebel, P.L.; Kramer, R.A. Binghamton, N.Y. : Food Products Press; 1991. Journal of sustainable agriculture v. 1 (4): p. 29-48; 1991. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Virginia; Groundwater pollution; Nitrates; Stochastic models; Stochastic programming; Agricultural policy; Costs 53 NAL Call. No.: SD143.S64 Implementation of the Clean Water Act (PL92-500) through best management practices implementation and monitoring. Parker, T. Bethesda, Md. : The Society; 1991. Proceedings of the ... Society of American Foresters National Convention. p. 593-594; 1991. Meeting held Aug 4-7, 1991, San Francisco, California. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Oregon; Washington; Water quality; Water management; Water pollution; Law; Federal government; National forests 54 NAL Call. No.: HD1401.S75 Integrating economic and environmental process models: an application of CEEPES to atrazine. Cabe, R.; Kuch, P.J.; Shogren, J.F. Ames, Iowa : Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, 1986-; 1991 May. Staff report / (54): 22 p.; 1991 May. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Atrazine; Groundwater pollution; Surface water; Environmental policy; Agricultural chemicals; Economic evaluation; Models 55 NAL Call. No.: S589.7.E57 1994 Involving agricultural procedures in the development of localized best management practices. Waskom, R.M.; Walker, L.R. St. Joseph, Mich. : American Society of Agricultural Engineers; 1994. Environmentally sound agriculture : proceedings of the second conference : 20-22 April 1994 /. p. 22-29; 1994. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Colorado; Cabt; Groundwater pollution; Agricultural chemicals; Pollution control; Water quality; Environmental protection; Legislation; Management 56 NAL Call. No.: TD172.I58 1987-no.1 Konsequenzen des Neuen Gewasserschutzrechts fur die Unternehmen [Consequences of new water protection laws for businesses]. Institut fur Gewerbliche Wasserwirtschaft und Luftreinhaltung (North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) Koln : Institut fur gewerbliche Wasserwirtschaft und Luftreinhaltung,; 1987. vi, 126 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. (IWL-Forum, 1987-1). Includes bibliographical references. Language: German 57 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 Am34 Laws and programs for controlling nonpoint source pollution in forest areas. Brown, T.C.; Brown, D.; Binkley, D. Bethesda, Md. : American Water Resources Association; 1993 Jan. Water resources bulletin v. 29 (1): p. 1-13; 1993 Jan. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Water pollution; Water quality; Pollution control; Monitoring; Legislation; Programs; State government; Federal government Abstract: Recent federal legislation strengthened nonpoint source pollution regulations and helped to support and standardize pollution control efforts. A comprehensive review of current state and federal programs for forest areas reveals a substantial increase in agency water quality protection activities. These new efforts emphasize monitoring to assess the use and effectiveness of best management practices (BMPs). Recent monitoring reveals that BMP use is increasing and that such use typically maintains water quality within standards. However, information is generally lacking about the cost effectiveness of BMP programs. Carefully designed and executed monitoring is the key to better specification of BMPs and more cost effective water quality protection. 58 NAL Call. No.: TD370.L43 1988 Lead water quality standards criteria summaries : a compilation of state/federal criteria.. Water quality standards criteria summaries United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water Regulations and Standards, Criteria and Standards Division, Standards Branch, Battelle Memorial Institute Washington, D.C. : U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ; Springfield, VA : distributed by NTIS,; 1988. 56 p. ; 28 cm. Cover title. "Office of Water Regulation and Standards"--Cover. September 1988. EPA 440/5-88/030. PB89-141626. Includes bibliographical references (p. 3-5). Language: English Descriptors: Water quality; Water; Lead 59 NAL Call. No.: KF26.G676 1991a Legal pollution of the Great Lakes hearing before the Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management of the Committee on Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, One Hundred Second Congress, first session, October 4, 1991. United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Governmental Affairs. Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management Washington : U.S. G.P.O. : For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office,; 1992; Y 4.G 74/9:S.hrg.102-460. iv, 206 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm. (S. hrg. ; 102-460). Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. Shipping list no.: 92-217-P. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English Descriptors: Great Lakes; Water; Transboundary pollution; Liability for water pollution damages 60 NAL Call. No.: SB379.A9A9 A management plan for the Santa Clara River. DePuydt, R. Carpinteria, Calif. : Rincon Information Management Corporation; 1993 May. California grower v. 17 (5): p. 44-46; 1993 May. Language: English Descriptors: California; Rivers; Water management; Farmers' associations; Environmental management; Federal government; State government; Law; Habitat destruction; Mining 61 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 C1282 Managing California's water quality in the 1990s. Maughan, W.D. Riverside, Calif. : The Center; 1992 Sep. Report - California Water Resources Center, University of California (77): p. 29-30; 1992 Sep. In the series analytic: Changing practices in ground water management--the pros and cons of regulation. Proceedings of the 18th biennial conference on ground water, held September 16-17, 1991, Sacramento, California. Language: English Descriptors: California; Water quality; Water management; Pollution; Regulations; State government 62 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 C1282 Managing the Salinas River Basin for quantity and quality. Hurst, W.F.; Howard, L.L.; Win, U. Riverside, Calif. : The Center; 1992 Sep. Report - California Water Resources Center, University of California (77): p. 93-101; 1992 Sep. In the series analytic: Changing practices in ground water management--the pros and cons of regulation. Proceedings of the 18th biennial conference on ground water, held September 16-17, 1991, Sacramento, California. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: California; Groundwater; Water management; Sea water; Pollution; Nitrates; Groundwater level; Water quality; State government; Organizations; Federal government 63 NAL Call. No.: TD427.M4M49 1988 Mercury water quality standards criteria summaries a compilation of state/federal criteria.. Water quality standards criteria summaries United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water Regulations and Standards, Criteria and Standards Division, Standards Branch, Battelle Memorial Institute Washington, D.C. : U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ; Springfield, VA : distributed by NTIS,; 1988. 60 p. ; 28 cm. Cover title. Contract 68-03-3534. "Office of Water Regulation and Standards"--Cover. September 1988. EPA 440/5-88/005. PB89-141378. Includes bibliographical references (p. 3-5). Language: English Descriptors: Mercury wastes; Water quality; Water 64 NAL Call. No.: 292.8 W295 Metamodels and nonpoint pollution policy in agriculture. Bouzaher, A.; Lakshminarayan, P.G.; Cabe, R.; Carriquiry, A.; Gassman, P.W.; Shogren, J.F. Washington : American Geophysical Union, 1965-; 1993 Jun. Water resources research v. 29 (6): p. 1579-1587; 1993 Jun. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Herbicides; Agricultural chemicals; Groundwater; Surface water; Water pollution; Water quality; Simulation models; Statistical analysis Abstract: Complex mathematical simulation models are generally used for quantitative measurement of the fate of agricultural chemicals in soil. But it is less efficient to use them directly for regional water quality assessments because of the large number of simulations required to cover the entire region and because the entire set of simulation runs must be repeated for each new policy. To make regional water quality impact assessment on a timely basis, a simplified technique called metamodeling is suggested. A metamodel summarizes the input-output relationships in a complex simulation model designed to mimic actual processes such as groundwater leaching. Metamodels are constructed and validated to predict groundwater and surface water concentrations of major corn and sorghum herbicides in the Corn Belt and Lake States regions of the United States. The usefulness of metamodeling in the evaluation of agricultural nonpoint pollution policies is illustrated using an integrated environmental economic modeling system. For the baseline scenario, we estimate that 1.2% of the regional soils will lead to groundwater detection of atrazine exceeding 0.12 micrograms/L, which compares well with the findings of an Environmental Protection Agency monitoring survey. The results suggest no-till practices could significantly reduce surface water concentration and a water quality policy, such as an atrazine ban, could increase soil erosion despite the conservation compliance provisions. 65 NAL Call. No.: TD224.M6M577 1992 Minnesota nonpoint source management progress in federal fiscal year 1992 the 1992 report to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency; United States, Environmental Protection Agency St. Paul : The Agency,; 1992. 238 p. : maps ; 28 cm. Language: English Descriptors: Water quality management; Nonpoint source pollution 66 NAL Call. No.: TD370.M59 1988 Mixing zones water quality standards criteria summaries a compilation of state/federal criteria.. Water quality standards criteria summaries United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water Regulations and Standards, Criteria and Standards Division, Standards Branch, Battelle Memorial Institute Washington, D.C. : U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ; Springfield, VA : distributed by NTIS,; 1988. 82 p. ; 28 cm. Cover title. Contract 68-03-3534. "Office of Water Regulation and Standards"--Cover. September 1988. EPA 440/5-88/015. PB89-141477. Bibliography: p. 4-6. Language: English Descriptors: Water quality; Water 67 NAL Call. No.: TD420.A1P7 Monitoring large scale wastewater reclamation systems--policy and experience. Azov, Y.; Juanico, M.; Shelef, G. Oxford : Pergamon Press; 1992. Water science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control v. 26 (7/8): p. 1545-1553; 1992. In the series analytic: Water Quality International '92. Part 4 / edited by M. Suzuki, et al. Proceedings of the Sixtennth Biennial Conference of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control, held May 24-30, 1992, Washington, D.C. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Israel; Waste water treatment; Effluents; Quality controls; Monitoring; Programs; Water reuse; Irrigation water 68 NAL Call. No.: S544.3.N7A4 New USDA incentive program an alternative to more farm regulations. Sumner, K. Middletown, N.Y. : Cornell Cooperative Ext.--Orange County Agriculture Program, Education Center; 1992 Dec. Agfocus : publication of Cornell Cooperative Extension--Orange County. p. 7, 16; 1992 Dec. Language: English Descriptors: Environmental protection; Water pollution; Residues; Water conservation; Incentives; Usda; Regulations 69 NAL Call. No.: S590.S68 Nitrate leaching and intensive outdoor pig production. Worthington, T.R.; Danks, P.W. Oxford : Blackwell Scientific Publications; 1992 Jun. Soil use and management v. 8 (2): p. 56-60; 1992 Jun. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Uk; Pig farming; Nitrate; Leaching; Losses from soil; Nitrogen cycle; Water pollution; Legislation Abstract: The production of pigs in outdoor units is gaining in popularity in the United Kingdom and is often concentrated on free-draining soils over important aquifers. Originally, stocking rates were sufficiently low to ensure the maintenance of a grass crop, but recently they have increased. Pigs are natural 'rooters' and wallowers and so cause damage to vegetation and soil structure. With overstocking these natural activities lead to considerable areas of bare, uncropped ground for much of the year. This paper assesses the potential for leaching of nitrate from such land, and makes recommendations for decreasing it. 70 NAL Call. No.: HC103.Z9W32 1991 Nonpoint source pollution.. Nonpoint source Doyle, Paul; Morandi, Larry B. National Conference of State Legislatures Denver, Colo. : National Conference of State Legislatures,; 1991. 11 p. ; 28 cm. (Financing clean water.). Caption title. "August 1991."--P. [4] of cover. Running title: Nonpoint source. "Fourth in a series that presents state legislative options to finance water programs."--P. [1]. Includes bibliographical references (p. 10). Language: English; English Descriptors: Water quality management; Water, Underground; Water 71 NAL Call. No.: KF3790.A5N66 1992 Nonpoint source water pollution causes, consequences, and cures. National Center for Agricultural Law Research and Information (U.S.),Arkansas Water Resources Research Center Fayetteville, Ark. : National Center for Agricultural Law Research and Information, University of Arkansas School of Law,; 1992. 1 v. (various pagings) : ill. ; 30 cm. At head of title: Conference handbook. "October 30-31, 1992"--T.p. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English; English Descriptors: Water; Water, Underground; Agricultural pollution; Agriculture 72 NAL Call. No.: HC107.N8R47 North Carolina regulatory programs to protect groundwater. Patte, D.E.M.; Danielson, L.E. Raleigh, N.C. : North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service; 1989 Dec. Resource economics (10): 8 p.; 1989 Dec. Language: English Descriptors: North Carolina; Groundwater pollution; Regulations; Water quality; Standards; Pollutants; Leaching; Pesticides; Water conservation 73 NAL Call. No.: S589.7.E57 1994 Opportunities available to the vertical integrator or food processor to achieve water quality benefits in the dairy and poultry industries. Manale, A.; Narrod, C.; Trachtenberg, E. St. Joseph, Mich. : American Society of Agricultural Engineers; 1994. Environmentally sound agriculture : proceedings of the second conference : 20-22 April 1994 /. p. 344-352; 1994. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Dairy industry; Poultry industry; Animal wastes; Waste disposal; Management; Water pollution; Externalities; Pollution control; Environmental policy; Water quality 74 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 C1282 Orange County ground water management. Mills, W.R. Riverside, Calif. : The Center; 1992 Sep. Report - California Water Resources Center, University of California (77): p. 133-138; 1992 Sep. In the series analytic: Changing practices in ground water management--the pros and cons of regulation. Proceedings of the 18th biennial conference on ground water, held September 16-17, 1991, Sacramento, California. Language: English Descriptors: California; Groundwater; Water management; Waste water treatment; Local government; Urban areas; Watershed management; Water quality; Wells 75 NAL Call. No.: SB610.2.B74 Pesticide contamination of water sources: current policies for protection and a multidisciplinary proposal to aid future planning. Carter, A.D.; Hollis, J.M.; Thompson, T.R.E.; Oakes, D.B.; Binney, R. Surrey : BCPC Registered Office; 1991. Brighton Crop Protection Conference-Weeds v. 2: p. 491-498; 1991. Conference held November 18-21, 1991, Brighton, England. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Uk; Pesticide residues; Water pollution; Water quality; Herbicides; Environmental policy 76 NAL Call. No.: 56.8 J822 Pesticide fate research trends within a strict regulatory environment: the case of Germany. Gassman, P.W. Ankeny, Iowa : Soil and Water Conservation Society of America; 1993 May. Journal of soil and water conservation v. 48 (3): p. 178-187; 1993 May. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Germany; Groundwater pollution; Water quality; Pesticide residues; Contamination; Environmental legislation; Interdisciplinary research; Agricultural research 77 NAL Call. No.: HD101.S6 Pesticide tax, cropping patterns, and water quality in south central Texas. Shumway, C.R.; Chesser, R.R. Lexington, Ky. : Southern Agricultural Economics Association, 1993-; 1994 Jul. Journal of agricultural and applied economics v. 26 (1): p. 224-240; 1994 Jul. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Texas; Cabt; Pesticides; Cropping systems; Water quality; Water supply; Taxes; Economic impact; Demand; Groundwater; Equations; Agricultural production Abstract: The impact of an ad valorem pesticide tax on cropping patterns and pesticide use was examined in the South Central Texas Crop Reporting District. Output supply equations were econometrically estimated and used in the simulation. A 25 percent tax on pesticide was estimated to have major impacts on cropping patterns and on pesticide use. Assuming other input and output prices were unaffected, the supply of one important crop would fall by more than half. Demand for some of the highly soluble and persistent pesticides, which present the greatest threat to groundwater quality, would also decrease substantially (some as much as 50 percent). 78 NAL Call. No.: S589.7.E57 1994 Petroleum storage tanks in the agriculture industry. Ward, C.G.; Harriman, J.R.; Fontaine, A.R. St. Joseph, Mich. : American Society of Agricultural Engineers; 1994. Environmentally sound agriculture : proceedings of the second conference : 20-22 April 1994 /. p. 399-406; 1994. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Agricultural sector; Petroleum; Fuel tanks; Leakage; Environmental policy; Regulations; Environmental legislation; Groundwater pollution; Pollution control 79 NAL Call. No.: S589.7.E57 1994 "Planned intervention": merging voluntary CAFO pollution abatement with command-and-control regulation. Frarey, L.C.; Jones, R. St. Joseph, Mich. : American Society of Agricultural Engineers; 1994. Environmentally sound agriculture : proceedings of the second conference : 20-22 April 1994 /. p. 215-222; 1994. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Texas; Cabt; Livestock farming; Animal feeding; Water pollution; Point sources; Pollution control; Regulations; State government; Water quality; Objectives 80 NAL Call. No.: 280.8 J822 Point/nonpoint source trading of pollution abatement: choosing the right trading ratio. Malik, A.S.; Letson, D.; Crutchfield, S.R. Ames, Iowa : American Agricultural Economics Association; 1993 Nov. American journal of agricultural economics v. 75 (4): p. 959-967; 1993 Nov. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Pollution control; Law enforcement; Costs; Water quality; Trading; Uncertainty; Mathematical models; Ratios Abstract: In programs for trading pollution abatement between point and nonpoint sources, the trading ratio specifies the rate at which nonpoint source abatement can be substituted for point source abatement.The appropriate value of this ratio is unclear because of qualitative differences between the two classes of sources. To identify the optimal trading ratio, we develop and analyze a model of point/nonpoint trading. We find the optimal trading ratio depends on the relative costs of enforcing point versus nonpoint reductions and on the uncertainty associated with nonpoint loadings. The uncertainty does not imply a lower bound for the optimal trading ratio. 81 NAL Call. No.: SB317.5.H68 Political perspective on water quality impact. Bolusky, B.; Regelbrugge, C. Alexandria, VA : American Society for Horticultural Science; 1992 Jan. HortTechnology v. 2 (1): p. 80-82; 1992 Jan. Proceedings of the Workshop, "Impact of Runoff Water Quality on Future Nursery Crop Production," held at the 87th ASHS Annual Meeting, November 8, 1990, Tucson, Arizona. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Agriculture; Water use; Politics; Water quality; Government; Regulations; Environmental legislation; Pesticides; Surface water; Groundwater; Water pollution 82 NAL Call. No.: KF27.S675 1992a Pollution and the Columbia River protecting a national treasure : hearing before the Subcommittee on Regulation, Business Opportunities, and Energy of the Committee on Small Business, House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, second session, Portland, OR, January 18, 1992. United States. Congress. House. Committee on Small Business. Subcommittee on Regulation, Business Opportunities, and Energy Washington : U.S. G.P.O. : For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office,; 1992; Y 4.Sm 1:102-59. iii, 123 p. : ill., map ; 24 cm. Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. Shipping list no: 92-0487-P. Serial no. 102-59. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English; English Descriptors: Columbia River; Water; Dioxins; Environmental policy 83 NAL Call. No.: TD420.A1P7 Potential and present wastewater reuse in Jordan. Gur, A.; Al Salem, S.S. Oxford : Pergamon Press; 1992. Water science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control v. 26 (7/8): p. 1573-1581; 1992. In the series analytic: Water Quality International '92. Part 4 / edited by M. Suzuki, et al. Proceedings of the Sixtennth Biennial Conference of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control, held May 24-30, 1992, Washington, D.C. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Jordan; Waste water treatment; Effluents; Water quality; Regulations; Water reuse 84 NAL Call. No.: S590.C63 Precision nutrient management--impact on the environment and needs for the future. Swader, F.; Woodward, M. New York, N.Y. : Marcel Dekker; 1994. Communications in soil science and plant analysis v. 25 (7/8): p. 881-888; 1994. Paper presented at the 1993 International Symposium on Soil Testing and Plant Analysis: Precision Nutrient Management, August 14-19, 1993, Olympia, Washington. Part 1. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Water quality; Water pollution; Point sources; Pollution control; Nutrients; Management; Application to land; Environmental protection; Profitability; Trends; Regulations; Sustainability 85 NAL Call. No.: QH541.5.L3P74 1991 A Prescription for healthy Great Lakes report of the Program for Zero Discharge. National Wildlife Federation, Canadian Institute for Environmental Law and Policy Ann Arbor, Mich. : National Wildlife Federation,; 1991. iv, 63 p. : ill ; 28 cm. Cover title. February, 1991. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English Descriptors: Ecology; Water 86 NAL Call. No.: TD171.U5 President Clinton's Clean Water Act Inititative: costs and benefits. Luttner, M. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; 1994. EPA journal v. 20 (1/2): p. 30-31; 1994. Language: English Descriptors: Legislation; Water quality; Water pollution; Costs 87 NAL Call. No.: TD172.5.A99 1990 Proceedings, AWWA Seminar on Current Research Activities in Support of USEPA'S Regulatory Agenda, annual conference, Cincinnati, Ohio, June 17-21, 1990. American Water Works Association, Research Division AWWA Seminar on Current Research Activities in Support of USEPA's Regulatory Agenda 1990 : Cincinnati, Ohio. Denver, CO : American Water Works Association,; 1990. vi, 140 leaves : ill. ; 28 cm. Cover title. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English Descriptors: Environmental protection; Drinking water 88 NAL Call. No.: TD426.N37 1986 Proceedings of a National Symposium on Liability Issues and Ground Water Pollution Control, May 22-23, 1986 conducted by the University of Oklahoma Environmental and Ground Water Institute and the Science and Public Policy Program in cooperation with other universities, sponsored by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Ground Water Protection. Canter, Larry W. University of Oklahoma, Environmental and Ground Water Institute, University of Oklahoma, Science and Public Policy Programs, United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Ground-Water Protection National Symposium on Liability Issues and Ground Water Pollution Control 1986 : Cambridge, Mass. Norman, Okla. : University of Oklahoma,; 1986. vi, 166 p. : ill., maps ; 28 cm. September, 1986. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English Descriptors: Water, Underground; Water quality 89 NAL Call. No.: SB433.34.V8V47 Programs to protect the Chesapeake Bay and the turf industry. Shank, R.F. Blacksburg, Va. : Virginia Cooperative Extension Service; 1991 Dec. Proceedings - Virginia Turfgrass Landscape Conference (31st): p. 82-86; 1991 Dec. Meeting held on January 14-17, 1991, Richmond, Virginia. Language: English Descriptors: Lawns and turf; Ecosystems; Water pollution; Algae; Environmental policy; Tines 90 NAL Call. No.: ArUKF5627.A314P767 1991 Proposed guidance specifying management measures for sources of nonpoint pollution in coastal waters, proposed under the authority of Section 6217(g) of the Coastal Zone Act Reauthorization Amendments of 1990. United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water Washington, D. C. : United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water,; 1991. 1 v. (various pagings) : ill. ; 28 cm. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English; English Descriptors: Coastal zone management; Water; Marine pollution 91 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 C1282 Pros and cons of ground water management or "look out for some extremely bogus thinking.". Kidman, A.G. Riverside, Calif. : The Center; 1992 Sep. Report - California Water Resources Center, University of California (77): p. 155-163; 1992 Sep. In the series analytic: Changing practices in ground water management--the pros and cons of regulation. Proceedings of the 18th biennial conference on ground water, held September 16-17, 1991, Sacramento, California. Language: English Descriptors: California; Groundwater; Water management; Groundwater pollution; Regulation; Local government; State government; Public utilities; Organic compounds; Water policy; Courts; Wells; Collectivization; Ownership 92 NAL Call. No.: aSD11.A42 Protection and management of riparian areas through water quality programs in Arizona. Randall, K.E. Fort Collins, Colo. : Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture; 1993. General technical report RM / (226): p. 107-111; 1993. In the series analytic: Riparian management: common threads and shared interests. Paper presented at a conference on Feb. 4-6, 1993, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Arizona; Cabt; Rivers; Riverbank protection; Water pollution; Conservation; Regulations 93 NAL Call. No.: S544.3.V8V52 The protection of groundwater resources: action at the local level. Blacksburg, Va. : Extension Division, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; 1990. Publication - Virginia Cooperative Extension Service (462-010): 22 p.; 1990. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Virginia; Groundwater pollution; Water quality; Water resources; Environmental protection; Local government; Legislation; Programs 94 NAL Call. No.: RA565.A1J6 Reevaluation of dioxin bioconcentration and bioaccumulation factors for regulatory purposes. Sherman, W.R.; Keenan, R.E.; Gunster, D.G. Washington, D.C. : Hemisphere Publishing; 1992 Oct. Journal of toxicology and environmental health v. 37 (2): p. 211-229; 1992 Oct. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Chlorinated hydrocarbons; Kraft mill effluent; Water pollution; Water quality; Regulations; Methodology; Aquatic environment; Fishes; Animal tissues; Calculation 95 NAL Call. No.: HC79.P55J6 Regulating agricultural groundwater contamination: a comment. Miceli, T.J.; Segerson, K. Orlando, Fla. : Academic Press; 1993 Sep. Journal of environmental economics and management v. 25 (2): p. 196-200; 1993 Sep. Original article published in this journal, v. 22 (1), p. 1-11. includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Georgia; Cabt; Idaho; Cabt; Minnesota; Cabt; Vermont; Cabt; Groundwater; Environmental legislation; Regulations; Legal liability; Game theory; Dynamic models; Agricultural chemicals Abstract: This comment argues that the model specification used by Wetzstein and Centner in a recent paper is not an appropriate representation of the problem of groundwater contamination from agricultural chemicals and that their conclusions regarding the efficiency of alternative liability rules are incorrect. In particular, the modified strict liability rule proposed by the authors will not lead to efficiency for what we argue is the correct model specification. Likewise, a pure negligence rule, which they argue is inefficient, is in fact efficient. 96 NAL Call. No.: 292.8 W295 The regulation of groundwater quality with delayed responses. Kim, C.S.; Hostetler, J.; Amacher, G. Washington, D.C. : American Geophysical Union; 1993 May. Water resources research v. 29 (5): p. 1369-1377; 1993 May. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Groundwater pollution; Pollution control; Groundwater; Water quality; Regulations; Dynamic models; Algorithms; Nitrogen fertilizers; Farm inputs; Leachates; Nitrates; Usage; Costs; Agricultural policy Abstract: This research develops a dynamic model of input regulation in the presence of externalities that do not occur simultaneously with input use. The model is formulated to study the regulation of firms that apply fertilizer, where leachate from the application of fertilizer accumulates in groundwater over time. In the model we show the derivation of an optimal nitrogen user fee and the consequences of regulatory design when time lags between nitrogen application and nitrate contamination are present. This research also responds to the need of developing a general solution algorithm for an optimal control model when the control variable exhibits a delayed response. A multistage solution algorithm presented in this paper is different from other studies in that a typical relationship is not assumed for the state and adjoint variables. 97 NAL Call. No.: 57.09 F41 Regulation update--clean water & phosphogypium. Johnson, K. Glen Arm, Md. : Fertilizer Industry Round Table; 1992. Proceedings /. p. 98-100; 1992. Meeting held on October 26-28, 1992, Baltimore, Maryland. Language: English Descriptors: Phosphogypsum; Fertilizer industry; Water pollution; Pollution control; Regulations; Point sources 98 NAL Call. No.: 57.8 SO4 Regulations generate business for resourceful dealers. Luporter, C. St. Louis, Mo. : Solutions Magazine; 1993 Feb. Solutions v. 37 (2): p. 28-31; 1993 Feb. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Pesticides; Testing; Businesses; Regulations; Federal government; Environmental impact; Water quality 99 NAL Call. No.: TD427.P35K44 1991 Report to the Legislature on pesticides in ground water submitted pursuant to Special act 86-44.. Pesticides in ground water Keeney, Timothy R. E. Connecticut, Dept. of Environmental Protection Hartford? : Dept. of Environmental Protection,; 1991. 22 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. Cover title. December 1991. Language: English; English Descriptors: Pesticides; Water, Underground 100 NAL Call. No.: KF3792.M58R62 1994 Restoring the Big River a clean water act blueprint for the Mississippi. Robinson, Ann Y.; Marks, Robbin Minneapolis, MN : Midwest Office, Izaak Walton League of America ; Washington, D.C. : National Office, Natural Resources Defense Council,; 1994. 53 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. February 1994. Includes bibliographical references (p. 49-53). Language: English; English Descriptors: Mississippi River; Water quality management 101 NAL Call. No.: 292.9 C1282 The role of law in managing ground water quality--why has it failed?. Tarlock, A.D. Riverside, Calif. : The Center; 1992 Sep. Report - California Water Resources Center, University of California (77): p. 39-46; 1992 Sep. In the series analytic: Changing practices in ground water management--the pros and cons of regulation. Proceedings of the 18th biennial conference on ground water, held September 16-17, 1991, Sacramento, California. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: California; Utah; Groundwater; Water quality; Regulations; State government; Federal government; Law; Urban areas; Rural areas; Groundwater pollution; Courts; Environmental impact; Ownership 102 NAL Call. No.: TD201.U61 Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1986. Cotruvo, J.A. Carbondale, Ill. : The Council,; 1994 May. Water resources update / (77): p. 11-14; 1994 May. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Drinking water; Legislation; Contaminants; Pollutants; Monitoring; Public health 103 NAL Call. No.: 290.9 Am32P Seeppage: a GIS model for groundwater pollution potential. Richert, S.E.; Young, S.E.; Johnson, C. St. Joseph, Mich. : American Society of Agricultural Engineers,; 1992. Paper / (92-2592): 15 p.; 1992. Paper presented at the "1992 International Winter Meeting sponsored by the American Society of Agricultural Engineers," December 15-18, 1992, Nashville, Tennessee. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Pennsylvania; Cabt; Groundwater pollution; Mathematical models; Evaluation; Screening; Geographical distribution; Decision making; Environmental policy 104 NAL Call. No.: QL461.A52 State departments of agriculture: pesticide and environmental specialists of the 1990's. Whitford, F.; Neu, J.A.; Brousseau, B.; Hardy, T.N.; Impson, J.W.; Rider, D.A. Lanham, Md. : Entomological Society of America; 1991. American entomologist v. 37 (1): p. 27-34. maps; 1991. Language: English Descriptors: Louisiana; U.S.A.; Pesticides; Legislation; Pollutants; Public health; Regulations; State government; Water pollution 105 NAL Call. No.: GB1197.82.M67 1989 State groundwater protection policies a legislator's guide. Morandi, Larry B.; Schwoch, Sharon National Conference of State Legislatures Denver, Colo. : National Conference of State Legislatures,; 1989. ix, 80 p. ; 23 cm. May 1989. Includes tables. Includes references and an appendix. Language: English; English Descriptors: Water, Underground 106 NAL Call. No.: SB433.34.V8V47 Stormwater management. Pokrifka, G.M. Blacksburg, Va. : Virginia Cooperative Extension Service; 1990 Dec. Proceedings - Virginia Turfgrass Landscape Conference (30th): p. 93-95; 1990 Dec. Meeting held January 15-18, 1990, Richmond, Virginia. Language: English Descriptors: Runoff water; Water management; Legislation; Pollutants; Water conservation 107 NAL Call. No.: TD223.P369 1992 Surface water quality have the laws been successful?. Patrick, Ruth Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press,; 1992. xvii, 198 p. : ill., maps ; 25 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. [158]-186) and index. Language: English; English Descriptors: Water quality; Water; Water quality management; Freshwater fauna 108 NAL Call. No.: TD420.A1P7 Technical guidance for implementing BMPS in the Coastal zone. Frederick, R.E.; Dressing, S.A. Oxford ; New York : Pergamon Press, c1981-; 1993. Water science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research v. 28 (3/5): p. 129-135; 1993. Paper presented at the IAWQ First International Conference on "Diffuse (Nonpoint) Pollution: Sources, Prevention, Impact, Abatement." September 19-24, 1993, Chicago, Illinois. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Water pollution; Coastal areas; Technical aid; Guidelines; Pollution; Sources 109 NAL Call. No.: SB319.2.F6F56 "The Guide": an industry response to new regulations. Lamberts, M.; Marewski, G.; Monteith, R.H.; Rabin, M. S.l. : The Society; 1990 May. Proceedings of the ... annual meeting of the Florida State Horticulture Society v. 102: p. 246-248; 1990 May. Proceedings held October 31-November 2, 1989, Tampa, Florida. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Florida; Regulations; Hazards; Labor; Nurseries; Pesticides; Water quality 110 NAL Call. No.: KF27.G655 1992c Thirty years after Silent spring status of EPA's review of older pesticides : hearing before the Environment, Energy, and Natural Resources Subcommittee of the Committee on Government Operations, House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, second session, July 23, 1992. United States. Congress. House. Committee on Government Operations. Environment, Energy, and Natural Resources Subcommittee Washington : U.S. G.P.O. : For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office,; 1993; Y 4.G 74/7:P 43/5. iii, 232 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche. Shipping list no.: 93-0353-P. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English Descriptors: Carson, Rachel 1907-1964 Silent spring; Pesticides; Pesticide residues in food 111 NAL Call. No.: 302.8 P11 Tighter regulations spur design of zero-discharge recycled mills. Kohler, C.W. San Francisco, Calif. : Miller Freeman Inc; 1994 May. Pulp & paper v. 68 (5): p. 89-91; 1994 May. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Pulp and paper industry; Recycling; Pollutants; Waste water; Factory effluents; Water conservation; Environmental legislation; Federal government 112 NAL Call. No.: TD420.A1P7 Trace metal soil quality criteria to protect groundwater. Lee, J.; Chen, B.; Allen, H.E.; Huang, C.P.; Sparks, D.L.; Sanders, P. Oxford : Pergamon Press; 1992. Water science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control v. 26 (9/11): p. 2327-2329; 1992. In the series analytic: Water Quality International '92. Part 5 / edited by M. Suzuki, et.al. Proceedings of the Sixteenth Biennial Conference of the International Association on Water Pollution Research and Control held May 24-30, 1992, Washington, D.C. Language: English Descriptors: New Jersey; Soil pollution; Pollutants; Standards; Metals; Groundwater pollution; Soil; Adsorption; Soil ph; Mathematical models 113 NAL Call. No.: 100 Ar4M Trouble down along the river. Kingdon, L.B. Tucson : Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Arizona; 1992. Research report. p. 6-7; 1992. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Arizona; Cabt; Waste water treatment; Riparian vegetation; Federal government; River water; River regulation; Deserts; Law; State government; Effluents; Groundwater pollution; Habitat destruction 114 NAL Call. No.: ArUKF5569.A2U53 1992 Uncovering the hidden resources groundwater law, hydrology, and policy in the 1990s, June 15-17, 1992. University of Colorado (Boulder), Natural Resources Law Center, Rocky Mountain Ground-Water Conference, Colorado Ground Water Association Boulder, CO : Natural Resources Law Center, University of Colorado School of Law,; 1992. 1 v. (loose-leaf) : ill. ; 30 cm. "Sponsored by Natural Resources Law Center, University of Colorado School of Law and the Rocky Mountain Ground-Water Conference, organized by the Colorado Ground-Water Association"--P. [1]. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English; English Descriptors: Water, Underground; Water resources development 115 NAL Call. No.: SB610.W39 Use of ground water monitoring data for pesticide regulation. Barrett, M.R.; Williams, W.M.; Wells, D. Champaign, Ill. : The Weed Science Society of America; 1993 Jan. Weed technology : a journal of the Weed Science Society of America v. 7 (1): p. 238-247; 1993 Jan. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Water quality; Groundwater pollution; Pesticides; Leaching; Pesticide residues; Drinking water; Regulations; Health hazards; Contaminants; Quality standards; Monitoring 116 NAL Call. No.: S544.3.V8V52 Use of incentives to enhance water quality program effectiveness. Kerns, W.R. Blacksburg, Va. : Extension Division, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; 1991. Publication - Virginia Cooperative Extension Service (448-104): 12 p.; 1991. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Virginia; Water quality; Incentives; Environmental policy; Environmental protection; Pollutants 117 NAL Call. No.: SB610.W39 Use of modeling in developing label restrictions for agricultural chemicals. Jones, R.L. Champaign, Ill. : The Society; 1992 Jul. Weed technology : a journal of the Weed Science Society of America v. 6 (3): p. 683-687; 1992 Jul. Paper presented at a Symposium on the, "Role of Modeling in Regulatory Affairs," at the Weed Science Society of America, February 4, 1991, Louisville, Kentucky. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Agricultural chemicals; Pesticides; Simulation models; Regulations; Labeling; Groundwater; Drinking water; Water quality 118 NAL Call. No.: S589.7.E57 1994 Virginia's integrated agricultural nonpoint source pollution control strategies. Croghan, M.B. St. Joseph, Mich. : American Society of Agricultural Engineers; 1994. Environmentally sound agriculture : proceedings of the second conference : 20-22 April 1994 /. p. 17-21; 1994. Language: English Descriptors: Virginia; Cabt; Agricultural land; Water pollution; Point sources; Pollution control; Environmental protection; Water quality; Environmental policy; State government 119 NAL Call. No.: TD172.I58 1978-no.2 Wasserrecht im Umbruch [Water law in flux]. Institut fur Gewerbliche Wasserwirtschaft ung Luftreinhaltung (North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) Koln : Das Institut,; 1978. vi, 88 p. ; 21 cm. (IWL-Forum, 1978-2). Includes bibliographical references. Language: German 120 NAL Call. No.: KF3788.4.W37 1979 Water pollution control. Bureau of National Affairs (Washington, D.C.) Washington : Bureau of National Affairs, 1979-; 1979-9999. 1 v. (loose-leaf) ; 26 cm. (BNA policy and practice series). Cover title. Has newsletter (1979-1986): Water pollution control ; Oct. 1986- :Air & water pollution control. Includes index. Language: English Descriptors: Water 121 NAL Call. No.: TD745.U6 1992 Water pollution state revolving funds insufficient to meet wastewater treatment needs : report to the Chairman, Committee on Public Works and Transportation, House of Representatives.. State revolving funds insufficient to meet wastewater treatment needs State revolving fund program United States. General Accounting Office; United States, Congress, House, Committee on Public Works and Transportation Washington, D.C. : The Office,; 1992; GA 1.13:RCED-92-35. 83 p. : ill. ; 28 cm. Cover title. Running title: State revolving fund program. January 1992. GAO/RCED-92-35. "B-245465"--P. [1]. Includes bibliographical references. Language: English; English Descriptors: Sewage 122 NAL Call. No.: TD420.A1P7 Water protection in the pulp industry: Australian and central European situation. Kroiss, H. \u University of Technology, Karlsplatz, Austria Oxford ; New York : Pergamon Press, c1981-; 1994. Water science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research v. 29 (5/6): p. 33-48; 1994. Selected Proceedings of the 4th IAWQ Symposium on Forestry Industry Wastewaters, held June 8-11, 1993, Tampere, Finland. Includes references. Language: English Descriptors: Austria; Cabt; German federal republic; Cabt; Pulp and paper industry; Sulfate pulping; Sulfite pulping; Kraft mill effluent; Pulp mill effluent; Water pollution; Pollution control; Water quality; Waste water treatment; Biological treatment; Legislation 123 NAL Call. No.: TD424.35.T2W37 Water quality concerns in the EC. Knoxville, Tenn. : Agricultural Extension Service, the Uni versity of Tennessee, Institute of Agriculture; 1992 Aug. Water protection conservation management / v. 5 (3): p. 2-3; 1992 Aug. Language: English Descriptors: Water quality; Nitrates; Animal wastes; Nitrogen fertilizers; Application; Guidelines 124 NAL Call. No.: 79.9 C122 Water quality management planning for pesticides used in trees and vines. Pepple, M.W. Fremont, Calif. : California Weed Conference; 1994. Proceedings / v. 46: p. 81-87; 1994. Meeting held January 17-19, 1994, San Jose, California. Language: English Descriptors: Pesticides; Environmental legislation; Water quality; Woody plants; Pesticide residues; Groundwater pollution 125 NAL Call. No.: aSD11.A42 Water quality management tools for national and western nonpoint source control. Dean, R. Fort Collins, Colo. : Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture; 1993. General technical report RM / (226): p. 3-7; 1993. In the series analytic: Riparian management: common threads and shared interests. Paper presented at a conference on Feb. 4-6, 1993, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Cabt; Water pollution; Environmental policy; Finance; Regulations 126 NAL Call. No.: S561.6.I8I572 Water quality proponent praises nitrogen reduction. Carver, N. Ames, Iowa : Integrated Farm Management/Model Farms, Iowa State Universtiy Extension Service; 1993 Jan. Inside edge v. 3 (1): p. 1, 4; 1993 Jan. Language: English Descriptors: Iowa; Groundwater; Protection; Water quality; Nitrogen fertilizers; Usage; Pesticides; Legislation 127 NAL Call. No.: 56.8 J822 What progress in improving water quality?. Wayland, R. Ankeny, Iowa : Soil and Water Conservation Society of America; 1993 Jul. Journal of soil and water conservation v. 48 (4): p. 261-266; 1993 Jul. In the special edition: The next generation of U.S. agricultural conservation policy. Paper presented at the conference "The Next Generation of U.S. Agricultural Policy", March 14-16, Kansas City, Missouri. Language: English Descriptors: U.S.A.; Water quality; Environmental legislation; Water pollution; Pollution control ****************************************************** AUTHOR INDEX Adams, E.B. 40 Adler, R. 16 Adler, R.W. 17 Al Salem, S.S. 83 Allen, G. 50 Allen, H.E. 112 Amacher, G. 96 American Bar Association, Section of Natural Resources, Energy, and Environmental Law, American Bar Association, Water Quality Committee, Environmental Law Institute 1 American Water Works Association, Research Division 87 Archer, J. 12 Azov, Y. 67 Baird, C. 9 Baldock, David 5 Barcelo, D. 33 Barrett, M.R. 115 Batie, S.S. 52 Behl, E. 20 Bennett, Graham 5 Bernardo, D.J. 28, 29, 51 Binkley, D. 57 Binney, R. 75 Bolusky, B. 81 Bouwer, H. 2 Bouzaher, A. 64 Brousseau, B. 104 Brown, D. 57 Brown, D.E. 39 Brown, T.C. 57 Bureau of National Affairs (Washington, D.C.) 120 Cabe, R. 54, 64 California, State Water Resources Control Board 25 Canada, Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate, Canada, Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate,Eco-Health Branch 13 Canada, Ecosystem Sciences and Evaluation Directorate, Eco-health Branch, Canada, Conservation and Protection 14 Canter, Larry W. 88 Carriquiry, A. 64 Carter, A.D. 75 Carver, N. 126 Chen, B. 112 Chesser, R.R. 77 Cohen, S. 3 Connecticut, Dept. of Environmental Protection 99 Contant, C.K. 26 Cotruvo, J.A. 102 Cox, U.N. 30 Croghan, M.B. 118 Crutchfield, S.R. 80 Cubbage, F.W. 41 Cunnane, J.C. 34 Danielson, L.E. 30, 72 Danks, P.W. 69 Dean, R. 125 DePuydt, R. 60 Diebel, P.L. 52 Doyle, Paul 70 Dressing, S.A. 108 Duffy, M.D. 26 Elliott, R.L. 28, 29, 51 Fontaine, A.R. 78 Foran, J.A. 17 Foster, I.D.L. 21 Frarey, L.C. 79 Frederick, R.E. 108 Freedman, Martin 7 Gareau, J. 14 Gassman, P.W. 64, 76 Geleta, S. 28, 29, 51 Goldstein, N. 35 Gunster, D.G. 94 Gur, A. 83 Halstead, J.M. 52 Haney, H.L. Jr 41 Hardy, T.N. 104 Harriman, J.R. 78 Hawks, L.J. 41 Heatwole, C.D. 52 Hinsey, N.W. 37 Hogg, D.L. 30 Hollis, J.M. 75 Holub, M.A. 26 Hostetler, J. 96 Howard, L.L. 62 Huang, C.P. 112 Hurst, W.F. 62 Impson, J.W. 104 Institut fur Gewerbliche Wasserwirtschaft und Luftreinhaltung (North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) 56 Institut fur Gewerbliche Wasserwirtschaft ung Luftreinhaltung (North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) 119 Jaggi, Bikki 7 Jennings, G. 30 Johnson, C. 103 Johnson, K. 97 Jones, R. 79 Jones, R.L. 117 Juanico, M. 67 Keenan, R.E. 94 Keeney, Timothy R. E. 99 Kent, R. A. 14 Kerns, W.R. 116 Keyes, A.M. 27 Kidman, A.G. 91 Kim, C.S. 96 Kingdon, L.B. 113 Kohler, C.W. 111 Kopania, A.A. 44 Kramer, R.A. 52 Kroiss, H. \u University of Technology, Karlsplatz, Austria 122 Kuch, P.J. 54 Lacewell, R.D. 50 Lakshminarayan, P.G. 64 Lamberts, M. 109 Lanyon, L.E. 23 Larson, B.A. 31 Larson, Bruce A. 4 Leatham, D.J. 50 Lee, J. 112 LeGrand, H.E. 18 Letson, D. 80 Linden, Werner, 42 Lovell, A. 50 Luporter, C. 98 Luttner, M. 86 Mackay, D.M. 44 Malik, A.S. 31, 80 Malik, Arun S. 4 Manale, A. 73 Manning, L. 9 Mapp, H.P. 28, 29, 51 Marewski, G. 109 Marks, Robbin 100 Marx, W. 43 Maughan, W.D. 61 Miceli, T.J. 95 Mills, W.R. 74 Minnesota Pollution Control Agency 65 Molnar, J.J. 19 Monteith, R.H. 109 Moore, D. R. G. 13 Morandi, Larry B. 70, 105 Myrick, C. 6 Napier, T.L. 39 Narrod, C. 73 National Center for Agricultural Law Research and Information (U.S.),Arkansas Water Resources Research Center 71 National Conference of State Legislatures 70, 105 National Wildlife Federation, Canadian Institute for Environmental Law and Policy 85 Neu, J.A. 104 Newman, D.H. 41 Nichols, B. 38 Niedermeyer, Dirk 47 Oakes, D.B. 75 Palmer, R.N. 27 Parker, T. 53 Patrick, Ruth 107 Patte, D.E.M. 72 Pepple, M.W. 124 Perez, K. 19 Pokrifka, G.M. 106 Rabin, M. 109 Randall, K.E. 92 RCG/Hagler, Bailly, Inc, American Water Works Association, Water Industry Technical Action Panel 22 Reed, D.T. 34 Regelbrugge, C. 81 Ribaudo, M. 31 Ribaudo, Marc 4 Richert, S.E. 103 Rider, D.A. 104 Robinson, Ann Y. 100 Rosen, L. 18 Sabbagh, G.J. 28, 29, 51 Sanders, P. 112 Schedler, Karl 46 Schmucker, J.F. 50 Schwart, R.B. 50 Schwoch, Sharon 105 Segerson, K. 95 Shaffer, R.M. 41 Shank, R.F. 89 Shelef, G. 67 Sherman, W.R. 94 Shogren, J.F. 54, 64 Shumway, C.R. 77 Sparks, D.L. 112 Stone, J.F. 28, 29, 51 Sumner, K. 68 Swader, F. 48, 84 Sweeten, J.M. 9 Tarlock, A.D. 101 Tasker, I.R. 34 Taylor, D.B. 52 Thompson, T.R.E. 75 Thorn, R.H. 21 Trachtenberg, E. 73 Trotter, D. M. 14 United States, Congress, House, Committee on Public Works and Transportation 121 United States, Dept. of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, Resources and Technology Division 4 United States, Environmental Protection Agency 65 United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water 90 United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water Regulations and Standards, Criteria and Standards Division, Standards Branch, Battelle Memorial Institute 10, 58, 63, 66 United States. Congress. House. Committee on Government Operations. Environment, Energy, and Natural Resources Subcommittee 36, 110 United States. Congress. House. Committee on Public Works and Transportation. Subcommittee on Water Resources 24 United States. Congress. House. Committee on Small Business. Subcommittee on Regulation, Business Opportunities, and Energy 82 United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Governmental Affairs. Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management 59 United States. General Accounting Office 121 University of Colorado (Boulder), Natural Resources Law Center, Rocky Mountain Ground-Water Conference, Colorado Ground Water Association 114 University of Oklahoma, Environmental and Ground Water Institute, University of Oklahoma, Science and Public Policy Programs, United States, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Ground-Water Protection 88 Van Woerkum, C.M.J. 19 Vandegrift, G.F. 34 Walker, L.R. 55 Ward, C.G. 78 Waskom, R.M. 55 Watkins, K.B. 28, 29, 51 Waxman, H. 8 Wayland, R. 127 Wells, D. 115 Whitford, F. 104 Williams, W.M. 115 Win, U. 62 Woodward, M. 84 Worthington, T.R. 69 Young, S.E. 103 ********************************************************** SUBJECT INDEX Adsorption 112 Agricultural chemicals 6, 28, 29, 39, 54, 55, 64, 95, 117 Agricultural land 118 Agricultural policy 39, 48, 52, 96 Agricultural pollution 4, 5, 42, 47, 71 Agricultural production 26, 28, 29, 77 Agricultural research 76 Agricultural sector 78 Agricultural wastes 40 Agriculture 48, 71, 81 Air 7 Air pollutants 38 Air pollution 12, 27, 37 Air quality management 46 Algae 89 Algorithms 96 Animal feeding 79 Animal manures 19 Animal tissues 94 Animal wastes 9, 19, 73, 123 Application 123 Application rates 11, 35, 45 Application to land 84 Aquatic environment 94 Aquifers 44 Arizona 15, 92, 113 Arkansas 15 Arsenic wastes 10 Atrazine 11, 45, 54 Austria 122 Biological treatment 122 Body water 43 Businesses 98 Cabt 6, 8, 11, 12, 17, 23, 26, 29, 29, 29, 29, 29, 30, 37, 38, 39, 49, 50, 54, 55, 57, 77, 79, 80, 84, 92, 95, 95, 95, 95, 102, 103, 108, 111, 113, 115, 118, 122, 122, 125 Calculation 94 California 15, 44, 60, 61, 62, 74, 91, 101 Carson, Rachel 1907-1964 Silent spring 110 Cattle feeding 23 Cattle manure 23 Chemicals 32, 51 Chlorinated hydrocarbons 94 Chromatography 33 Coastal areas 108 Coastal zone management 90 Collectivization 91 Colorado 29, 55 Columbia River 82 Conservation 92 Contaminants 102, 115 Contamination 8, 76 Corn belt states of U.S.A. 11 Costs 52, 80, 86, 96 Courts 91, 101 Crop yield 11 Cropping systems 77 Cultural methods 40 Dairy farms 9, 23 Dairy industry 73 Dairy wastes 50 Decision making 103 Demand 77 Deserts 113 Determination 33 Dioxins 82 Drinking water 8, 16, 22, 25, 30, 87, 102, 115, 117 Dynamic models 95, 96 Ecology 85 Economic evaluation 54 Economic impact 28, 29, 30, 77 Economic policy 31 Ecosystems 89 Education 49 Effluents 67, 83, 113 Environmental degradation 43 Environmental impact 27, 28, 29, 98, 101 Environmental law 46 Environmental legislation 3, 6, 17, 19, 31, 38, 40, 76, 78, 81, 95, 111, 124, 127 Environmental management 60 Environmental policy 23, 43, 48, 54, 73, 75, 78, 82, 89, 103, 116, 118, 125 Environmental protection 16, 27, 43, 46, 55, 68, 84, 87, 93, 116, 118 Equations 77 Estuaries 24 Estuarine area conservation 24 Estuarine pollution 24 Europe 33 European communities 21, 32, 33 Evaluation 103 Externalities 73 Factory effluents 111 Factory fumes 37 Farm inputs 96 Farm management 39 Farm structure 39 Farmers' associations 60 Farmers' attitudes 39 Federal government 3, 15, 35, 38, 53, 57, 60, 62, 98, 101, 111, 113 Feedlots 9 Fertilizer industry 97 Fertilizers 42 Finance 125 Fish 16 Fishes 94 Florida 109 Food contamination 16 Forests 41 Freshwater fauna 107 Fuel tanks 78 Game theory 95 Geographical distribution 103 Geology 44 Georgia 95 German federal republic 122 Germany 76 Government 81 Government organizations 27 Great Lakes 59 Groundwater 3, 15, 20, 28, 29, 51, 62, 64, 74, 77, 81, 91, 95, 96, 101, 117, 126 Groundwater level 62 Groundwater pollution 3, 12, 15, 18, 28, 29, 34, 39, 40, 44, 52, 54, 55, 72, 76, 78, 91, 93, 96, 101, 103, 112, 113, 115, 124 Guidelines 32, 108, 123 Habitat destruction 60, 113 Hazardous wastes 36 Hazards 27, 109 Health hazards 39, 115 Herbicides 14, 64, 75 Idaho 95 Illinois 49 Incentives 31, 68, 116 Industrialization 30 Innovation adoption 39 Intensive livestock farming 19 Interdisciplinary research 76 Iowa 26, 126 Irish republic 21 Irrigation water 2, 67 Israel 67 Jordan 83 Kansas 15, 29 Knowledge 39 Kraft mill effluent 94, 122 Labeling 117 Labor 109 Land use 30 Law 7, 53, 60, 101, 113 Law enforcement 49, 80 Lawns and turf 89 Leachates 96 Leaching 69, 72, 115 Lead 58 Leakage 78 Learning theory 39 Legal liability 95 Legislation 8, 12, 16, 18, 21, 41, 50, 55, 57, 69, 86, 93, 102, 104, 106, 122, 126 Liability for water pollution damages 5, 59 Literature reviews 34 Livestock farming 79 Local government 74, 91, 93 Losses from soil 69 Louisiana 104 Management 18, 55, 73, 84 Marine pollution 90 Maryland 41, 43 Mathematical models 28, 29, 80, 103, 112 Mercury wastes 63 Metals 112 Methodology 94 Mining 60 Minnesota 95 Mississippi River 100 Models 28, 29, 39, 54 Monitoring 3, 57, 67, 102, 115 National forests 53 Netherlands 19 New Jersey 112 New Mexico 29 Nitrate 69 Nitrates 12, 15, 21, 47, 52, 62, 96, 123 Nitrogen cycle 69 Nitrogen fertilizers 96, 123, 126 Noise control 46 Nonpoint source pollution 65 North Carolina 30, 72 Nurseries 109 Nutrients 84 Objectives 79 Odors 12 Ohio 39 Oklahoma 29 Oregon 53 Organic compounds 44, 91 Organizations 62 Organotin compounds 13 Ownership 91, 101 Pathogens 35 Pennsylvania 43, 103 Perception 39 Pesticide residues 33, 75, 76, 115, 124 Pesticide residues in food 110 Pesticides 3, 20, 72, 77, 81, 98, 99, 104, 109, 110, 115, 117, 124, 126 Petroleum 78 Phosphogypsum 97 Pig farming 69 Point sources 79, 84, 97, 118 Policy 18, 21, 32 Politics 81 Polllution control industry 36 Pollutants 16, 35, 38, 49, 72, 102, 104, 106, 111, 112, 116 Polluted water 49 Pollution 61, 62, 108 Pollution by tourism 49 Pollution control 6, 17, 21, 23, 31, 37, 45, 55, 57, 73, 78, 79, 80, 84, 96, 97, 118, 122, 127 Poultry industry 73 Poultry manure 12 Prevention 21, 49 Production costs 23 Profitability 84 Programming 28, 29 Programs 57, 67, 93 Protection 18, 30, 126 Public agencies 37 Public health 35, 102, 104 Public utilities 91 Pulp and paper industry 37, 38, 111, 122 Pulp mill effluent 37, 122 Quality controls 67 Quality standards 2, 115 Radioactive pollution of water 22 Radioactive wastes 34 Radium 22 Radon 22 Ratios 80 Reclamation 34 Recreation 49 Recycling 111 Refuse 2 Refuse and refuse disposal 46 Registration 20 Regulation 9, 91 Regulations 15, 27, 30, 33, 34, 35, 44, 45, 61, 68, 72, 78, 79, 81, 83, 84, 92, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 101, 104, 109, 115, 117, 125 Residential areas 30 Residues 68 Resource conservation 41 Riparian vegetation 113 Risk 27 River regulation 113 River water 113 Riverbank protection 92 Rivers 60, 92 Runoff 9, 50 Runoff water 106 Rural areas 101 Screening 103 Sea water 62 Separation 34 Sewage 121 Sewage sludge 35 Shellfish 16 Simulation models 20, 28, 29, 64, 117 Soil 112 Soil ph 112 Soil pollution 34, 112 Sorghum 11 Sources 26, 49, 108 Standards 72, 112 State government 3, 15, 57, 60, 61, 62, 79, 91, 101, 104, 113, 118 Statistical analysis 64 Stochastic models 52 Stochastic programming 52 Sulfate pulping 122 Sulfite pulping 122 Surface water 12, 54, 64, 81 Sustainability 84 Taxes 77 Technical aid 108 Technology 34 Testing 98 Texas 9, 29, 50, 77, 79 Tines 89 Trading 80 Transboundary pollution 59 Trends 84 Trihalomethanes 25 U.S.A. 6, 8, 17, 18, 19, 23, 33, 35, 37, 38, 45, 54, 57, 80, 81, 84, 94, 98, 102, 104, 108, 111, 115, 125, 127 Uk 12, 21, 69, 75 Uncertainty 80 Uranium 22 Urban areas 74, 101 Usage 96, 126 Usda 48, 68 Utah 101 Vermont 95 Virginia 41, 43, 52, 93, 116, 118 Washington 40, 53 Waste disposal 9, 40, 49, 73 Waste water 50, 111 Waste water treatment 2, 67, 74, 83, 113, 122 Wastes 27, 34, 49 Water 4, 5, 7, 10, 36, 58, 59, 63, 66, 70, 71, 82, 85, 90, 107, 120 Water conservation 40, 68, 72, 106, 111 Water erosion 49 Water management 15, 44, 53, 60, 61, 62, 74, 91, 106 Water policy 3, 28, 29, 35, 91 Water pollution 6, 9, 12, 16, 17, 21, 23, 26, 27, 30, 31, 33, 37, 42, 43, 45, 48, 49, 53, 57, 64, 68, 69, 73, 75, 79, 81, 84, 86, 89, 92, 94, 97, 104, 108, 118, 122, 125, 127 Water quality 2, 8, 9, 10, 11, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 32, 41, 48, 49, 50, 51, 53, 55, 57, 58, 61, 62, 63, 64, 66, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 79, 80, 81, 83, 84, 86, 88, 93, 94, 96, 98, 101, 107, 109, 115, 116, 117, 118, 122, 123, 124, 126, 127 Water quality management 14, 46, 65, 70, 100, 107 Water quality monitoring 13 Water recreation 16 Water resources 30, 93 Water resources development 114 Water reuse 2, 67, 83 Water supply 77 Water use 81 Water, underground 47 Water, Underground 70, 71, 88, 99, 105, 114 Watershed management 74 Watersheds 30, 43 Waterways 30 Wells 15, 44, 74, 91 Wetland conservation 1 Wetlands 1, 16, 35 Woody plants 124 Zea mays 11 ********************************************************* NAL DOCUMENT DELIVERY SERVICES June 1993 United States Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Library Public Services Division Document Delivery Services Branch Beltsville, Maryland 20705-2351 The National Agricultural Library has established document delivery service policies for three user categories. They are 1) individuals; 2) libraries, other information centers, and commercial organizations; and 3) foreign libraries, information centers, and commercial organizations. Available services for each user category are given below. For information on electronic access for interlibrary loan requests, the "Interlibrary Loan" file. 1) DOCUMENT DELIVERY SERVICES TO INDIVIDUALS The National Agricultural Library (NAL) supplies agricultural materials not found elsewhere to other libraries. Filling requests for materials readily available from other sources diverts NAL's resources and diminishes its ability to serve as a national source for agricultural and agriculturally related materials. Therefore, NAL is viewed as a library of last resort. SUBMIT REQUESTS FIRST TO LOCAL OR STATE LIBRARY SOURCES PRIOR TO SENDING TO NAL. In the United States, possible sources are public libraries, land-grant university or other large research libraries within a state. In other countries submit requests through major university, national, or provincial institutions. If the needed publications are not available from these sources, submit requests to NAL with a statement indicating their non-availability. Submit one request per page following the instructions for libraries below. NAL'S DOCUMENT DELIVERY SERVICE INFORMATION FOR THE LIBRARY The following information is provided to assist your librarian in obtaining the required materials. LOAN SERVICE -- Materials in NAL's collection are loaned only to other U.S. libraries. Requests for loans are made through local public, academic, or special libraries. The following materials are not available for loan: serials (except USDA serials); rare, reference, and reserve books; microforms; and proceedings of conferences or symposia. Photocopy or microform of non-circulating publications may be purchased as described below. DOCUMENT DELIVERY SERVICE -- Photocopies of articles are available for a fee. Make requests through local public, academic, or special libraries. The library will submit a separate interlibrary loan form for each article or item requested. If the citation is from an NAL database (CAIN/AGRICOLA, "Bibliography of Agriculture," or the NAL Catalog) and the call number is given, put that call number in the proper block on the request form. Willingness to pay charges must be indicated on the form. Include compliance with copyright law or a statement that the article is for "research purposes only" on the interlibrary loan form or letter. Requests cannot be processed without these statements. Please read copyright notice below. CHARGES: * Photocopy, hard copy of microfilm and microfiche - $5.00 for the first 10 pages or fraction copied from a single article or publication. $3.00 for each additional 10 pages or fraction. * Duplication of NAL-owned microfilm - $10.00 per reel. * Duplication of NAL-owned microfiche - $ 5.00 for the first fiche and $ .50 for each additional fiche per title. BILLING -- Charges include postage and handling, and are subject to change. Invoices are issued quarterly by the National Technical Information Service (NTIS), 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161. Establishing a deposit account with NTIS is encouraged. DO NOT SEND PREPAYMENT. SEND REQUESTS TO: USDA, National Agricultural Library Document Delivery Services Branch, PhotoLab 10301 Baltimore Blvd., NAL Bldg. Beltsville, Maryland 20705-2351 Contact the Head, Document Delivery Services Branch in writing or by calling (301) 504-5755 with questions or comments about this policy. 2) DOCUMENT DELIVERY SERVICES AVAILABLE TO LIBRARIES, OTHER INFORMATION CENTERS AND COMMERCIAL ORGANIZATIONS. The National Agricultural Library (NAL) accepts requests from libraries and other organizations in accordance with the national and international interlibrary loan code and guidelines. In its national role, NAL supplies copies of agricultural materials not found elsewhere. Filling requests for materials readily available from other sources diverts NAL's resources and diminishes its ability to serve as a national source for agricultural and agriculturally related materials. Therefore, NAL is viewed as a library of last resort. Submit requests to state/region/network sources prior to sending to NAL. Within the United States, possible sources are public libraries, land-grant university libraries or other large research libraries within a state. In other countries submit requests to major university, national or provincial institutions. If the needed publications are not available from these sources, submit requests to NAL with a statement indicating their non-availability. REQUESTS -- Submit on the American Library Association (ALA) or the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) interlibrary loan form or via electronic mail or telefacsimile (see over for more details). Include the complete name of the person authorizing the request on each form; the standard bibliographic source which lists the title as owned by NAL; and the call number if the citation is from an NAL database (CAIN/AGRICOLA, "Bibliography of Agriculture," or the NAL catalog). LOAN SERVICE -- Materials in the NAL collection are loaned only to U.S. libraries. The loan period is one month. The following materials are not available for loan: serials (except for USDA serials); rare, reference, and reserve books; microforms; and proceedings of conferences or symposia. Photocopy or microform of the non-circulating publications is supplied automatically (as described below) when the requesting organization indicates that photocopy is acceptable on the loan form. AUDIOVISUALS (AVs) -- Order at least 3-4 weeks before the intended show date. Give show date and alternate show date when requesting specific titles. Request specific format needed if more than one format is given in the citation. DOCUMENT DELIVERY SERVICE -- Submit a separate completed interlibrary loan form for each article required. Indicate willingness to pay charges on the form and compliance with copyright law or include a statement that the article is for "research purposes only." Requests are not processed without these statements. Please read copyright notice below. CHARGES: * Photocopy, hard copy of microfilm and microfiche - $5.00 for the first 10 pages or fraction copied from a single article or publication. $3.00 for each additional 10 pages or fraction. * Duplication of NAL-owned microfilm - $10.00 per reel. * Duplication of NAL-owned microfiche - $5.00 for the first fiche and $ .50 for each additional fiche per title. BILLING - Charges include postage and handling, and are subject to change. Invoices are issued quarterly by the National Technical Information Service (NTIS), 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161. Establishing a deposit account with NTIS is encouraged. DO NOT SEND PREPAYMENT. Send Requests to: USDA, National Agricultural Library Document Delivery Services Branch, ILL, PhotoLab 10301 Baltimore Blvd., NAL Bldg. Beltsville, Maryland 20705-2351 Contact the Head, Document Delivery Services Branch in writing or by calling (301) 504-5755 with questions or comments about this policy. 3) DOCUMENT DELIVERY SERVICES AVAILABLE TO FOREIGN LIBRARIES, INFORMATION CENTERS AND COMMERCIAL ORGANIZATIONS. The National Agricultural Library (NAL) accepts requests from libraries and other organizations in accordance with the national and international interlibrary loan code and guidelines. In its national role, NAL supplies copies of agricultural materials not found elsewhere. Filling requests for materials readily available from other sources diverts NAL's resources and diminishes its ability to serve as a national source for agricultural and agriculturally related materials. Therefore, NAL is viewed as a library of last resort. Submit requests to major university libraries, national or provincial institutions or network sources prior to sending requests to NAL. If the needed publications are not available from these sources, submit requests to NAL with a statement indicating their non-availability. AGLINET -- Requesters in countries with an AGLINET library are encouraged to make full use of that library and its networking capabilities. As an AGLINET participant, NAL provides free document delivery service for materials published in the United States to other AGLINET participants. REQUESTS -- Submit requests on the American Library Association (ALA) or the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) interlibrary loan form or via electronic mail or telefacsimile (see over for more details). Include the complete name of the person authorizing the request on each form; the standard bibliographic source which lists the title as owned by NAL; and the call number if the citation is from an NAL database(CAIN/AGRICOLA, "Bibliography of Agriculture", or the NAL catalog). DOCUMENT DELIVERY SERVICE -- Submit a separate completed interlibrary loan form for each article requested. Indicate willingness to pay charges on the form, and compliance with copyright law or include a statement that the article is for "research purposes only". Requests cannot be processed without these statements. Please read copyright notice below. CHARGES: * Photocopy, hard copy of microfilm and microfiche - $5.00 for the first 10 pages or fraction copied from a single article or publication. $3.00 for each additional 10 pages or fraction. * Duplication of NAL-owned microfilm - $10.00 per reel. * Duplication of NAL-owned microfiche - $5.00 for the first fiche and $ .50 for each additional fiche per title. BILLING - Charges include postage and handling, and are subject to change. Invoices are issued quarterly by the National Technical Information Service (NTIS), 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161. Establishing deposit account with NTIS is encouraged. Annual billing is available to foreign institutions on request by contacting NAL at the address below. DO NOT SEND PREPAYMENT. Send Requests to: USDA, National Agricultural Library Document Delivery Services Branch, ILL, PhotoLab 10301 Baltimore Blvd., NAL Bldg. Beltsville, Maryland 20705-2351 Contact the Head, Document Delivery Services Branch at (301) 504-5755 with questions or comments about this policy. ELECTRONIC MAIL ACCESS FOR INTERLIBRARY LOAN (ILL) REQUESTS June 1993 The National Agricultural Library (NAL), Document Delivery Services Branch accepts ILL requests from libraries via several electronic services. All requests must comply with established routing and referral policies and procedures. The transmitting library will pay all fees incurred during the creation of requests and communication with NAL. A sample format for ILL requests is printed below along with a list of the required data/format elements. ELECTRONIC MAIL - (Sample form below) SYSTEM ADDRESS CODE ==================================================== INTERNET. . . . . LENDING@NALUSDA.GOV EASYLINK. . . . . 62031265 ONTYME. . . . . . NAL/LB TWX/TELEX . . . . Number is 710-828-0506 NAL LEND. This number may only be used for ILL requests. FTS2000 . . . . . A12NALLEND OCLC . . . . . . NAL's symbol AGL need only be entered once, but it must be the last entry in the Lender string. Requests from USDA and Federal libraries may contain AGL anywhere in the Lender String. SAMPLE ELECTRONIC MAIL REQUEST =================================================================| AG University/NAL ILLRQ 231 4/1/93 NEED BY: 6/1/93 | | | | Interlibrary Loan Department | | Agriculture University | | Heartland, IA 56789 | | | | Dr. Smith Faculty Ag School | | | | Canadian Journal of Soil Science 1988 v 68(1): 17-27 | | DeJong, R. Comparison of two soil-water models under | | semi-arid growing conditions | | Ver: AGRICOLA | | Remarks: Not available at IU or in region. | | NAL CA: 56.8 C162 | | | | Auth: C. Johnson CCL Maxcost: $15.00 | | | | MORE | | | ================================================================= TELEFACSIMILE - Telephone number is 301-504-5675. NAL accepts ILL requests via telefacsimile. Requests should be created on standard ILL forms and then faxed to NAL. NAL does not fill requests via Fax at this time. REQUIRED DATA ELEMENTS/FORMAT 1. Borrower's address must be in block format with at least two blank lines above and below so form may be used in window envelopes. 2. Provide complete citation including verification, etc. 3. Provide authorizing official's name (request will be rejected if not included). 4. Include statement of copyright compliance if applicable. Please read copyright notice below. 5. Indicate willingness to pay applicable charges. 6. Include NAL call number if available. Contact the Document Delivery Services Branch at (301) 504-6503 if additional information is required. **************************************************************** Photocopy Warning: NOTICE WARNING CONCERNING COPYRIGHT RESTRICTIONS The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specific conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be "used for any purpose other than private study, scholarship, or research." If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excess of "fair use," that user may be liable for copyright infringement. This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in its judgement, fulfillment of the order would involve violation of copyright law. 37 C.F.R. §201.14 ************************************************************************** The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in its programs on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, and marital or familial status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs). Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact the USDA Office of Communications at (202) 720-5881 (voice) or (202) 720-7808 (TDD). To file a complaint, write the Secretary of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250, or call (202) 720-7327 (voice) or (202) 720-1127 (TDD). USDA is an equal employment opportunity employer.
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Last update: April 27, 1998
The URL of this page is http://www.nal.usda.gov/wqic/Bibliographies/qb9510.html
J. R. Makuch /USDA-ARS-NAL-WQIC/
jmakuch@nal.usda.gov