Stream Heroes for the Unseen Winners

Stream Heroes for the Unseen Winners
By Jeff Cantrell, Volunteer Engagement Specialist
There are probably as many reasons to be involved in Missouri Stream Team as there are people who identify themselves as a “Stream Teamer” (could be thousands). Caring about the environment and often having an ownership are the underlining themes for the volunteer’s dedication. The volunteer efforts in categories of litter pick up, water quality monitoring, stream habitat and stream bank erosion are truly “frontline” efforts to conservation work for a large number of species. The types of events with storm drain stenciling and educational programs bring both immediate and far-reaching change with people’s awareness and actions.
We maintain satisfaction with regular water quality testing of our adopted stream sites. We’ve earned self-pride when we turn in a monitoring report which displays a change in past observed data. That report will be significant and our biologists with Department of Natural Resources will want to investigate possible causes and effects. Those changes may have been hidden longer if not for vigilant members of Missouri Stream Team. Certainly, a sense of accomplishment fulfills volunteers when they end a float with a mesh bag of trash, a tire, and some cans to recycle. The evidence of the litter pick-up cultivates the volunteer’s smile, but there are other unseen winners of these results. Some of the waters surrounding these stream team events work their way down large and extremely small passages in Missouri’s karst topography. These dark waters may provide residence for animals living underground like the endangered Ozark cavefish and the rare grotto salamander. Conservationists applaud Stream Teamers for this frontline action to help these cave species. Nationwide many species of freshwater fishes, mussels, and crawdads are showing population declines. Biologists collaborate conservation efforts and plans for recovery of these aquatic species like the Niangua darter, Neosho mucket, and Freckled crayfish. However, often the foundation of those recovery plans has a footing based on volunteers’ efforts in outreach regarding land use from erosion control of silt in the stream to preventing items like tires and other car parts eroding toxins in the water. It might not be written in the conservation plan itself, but volunteer efforts are in the management framework for positive results.
Unseen benefits also move up the food chain and throughout food webs of the state’s wildlife. Keeping the food chains healthy for everything from smallmouth bass, river otters, to osprey and bald eagles should add to that sense of accomplishment and pride in enjoying our rivers and streams. The Missouri Stream Team shirt is a symbol of caring, being part of something larger than us and truly is an amazing benefit to our environment. Thank you, heroes, for your passion, sharing, and being on the frontline of conservation! Please be proud of your efforts; we are proud of you!

