Watersheds
The
Chesapeake Bay and Agriculture
(from the October
2006 USDA/NRCS Conservation Resource Brief)
Overview
The Chesapeake Bay is the largest estuary in North America,
home to more than 3,600 species of plants, fish and animals. Nearly 16 million
people live in the Bay watershed.The basin that drains into the Bay covers
nearly 44.5 million acres over six states and the District of Columbia. The
Chesapeake Bay has the highest land to water ratio of any estuary in the U.S.
Land based activities heavily influence the condition of the Bay. Major
environmental challenges in the Chesapeake Bay region include landscape change,
excess nutrients, sediments, toxic chemical contaminants, and air pollution
(Chesapeake Bay Program, 2006). Conversion of land from agricultural to other
uses creates a complex interaction among resource concerns, including increased
runoff. Urban and suburban areas deliver the highest pollutant loads on a per
acre basis and occupy over 5 million acres of the watershed. Agriculture is
identified as another top contributor of non-point source pollutants because it
occupies such a large share of the non-forested portion of the watershed,
approximately 10 million acres.

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Tributary Strategies
Cecil County is part of two Tributary Strategy teams,
UPPER WESTERN SHORE and
UPPER EASTERN SHORE.

Click here to learn more about Maryland's
Tributary Strategies

No matter where you live, the rainfall landing on your property or lawn winds up in some creek, stream, or river. Want to find out more about where your rainfall goes? Check out the following links:
