Protecting Clean and Healthy Waters

Facing our challenges:

Good water quality will continue to be important to all Missourians. It is also essential to the health of the state's plants and animals. Threats to our stream and river habitats include uncontrolled storm water runoff, chemical pollution, water depletion and soil erosion (which alters stream channels, scours away stream banks and covers underwater habitat with sediment). Because stream problems often begin “uphill,” maintaining or improving the health of any stream or river requires cooperation among all those who live or work within its watershed.

Goal: The Conservation Department will focus efforts to increase the health of Missouri streams.

Results we want to achieve:

What we will do:

What Missourians tell us

Almost two-thirds of all Missourians worry “a great deal” about pollution of rivers, streams and lakes (63 percent) and pollution of drinking water (66 percent).

Almost two-thirds (65 percent) of those polled said they worry “a great deal,” “a fair amount” or“a little” about channelized or altered streams.

In the last 15 years, participation in stream protection programs has grown to include more than 40,500 volunteers in more than 2,650 Stream Teams statewide.