Texas Watch is now Texas Stream Team, Caring for Our Waters
Download this PDF to learn about our name change.
What Is Texas Stream Team?
Texas Stream Team is a network of trained volunteers and supportive partners working together to gather information about the natural resources of Texas and to ensure the information is available to all Texans. Volunteers are trained to collect quality-assured information that can be used to make environmentally sound decisions. Established in 1991 as Texas Watch, Texas Stream Team is administered through a cooperative partnership between Texas State University, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Currently, over 400 Texas Stream Team volunteers collect water quality data on lakes, rivers, and streams. Volunteers complete three phases of training using a test kit that measures physical and chemical parameters in water.
If you are interested in the Texas Stream Team program or to become a certified Water Quality Monitor in the H-GAC Region, please contact Gayla Stock, Texas Stream Team Coordinator, at gayla.stock@h-gac.com.
Find out more about the mission of the Texas Stream Team.
Certification
Participants in Texas Stream Team are certified at various levels depending on their environmental monitoring activities. Participants must complete a monitoring plan before training begins to specify their environmental goals and concerns. Texas Stream Team staff offer guidance in this process and provide the appropriate training so volunteers can effectively monitor the environment to achieve their goals. Find out more about the different types of certification or visit our publications page.
Texas Stream Team Training Events
None scheduled at this time.
Volunteers complete three phases of training using a test kit that measures physical and chemical parameters in water. Volunteers are asked to monitor their site(s) monthly at the same time of day each month, for a two year commitment. Monitoring takes approximately one to two hours.
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| Training Phase I: | is a hands-on in a classroom setting.
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| Training Phase II:
| provides the volunteers the opportunity to conduct the monitoring procedures in the field.
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| Training Phase III:
| is conducted as a one-on-one session with a trainer and each volunteer at their monitoring site.
Texas Stream Team Data
Find out how to submit your data and download historical data.