Changeflow GovPing Environment Wyoming DEQ: Lonesome Lake and Big Sandy Lake W...
Routine Notice Added Final

Wyoming DEQ: Lonesome Lake and Big Sandy Lake Water Quality Findings

Favicon for deq.wyoming.gov deq.wyoming.gov
Published January 14th, 2026
Detected March 17th, 2026
Email

Summary

The Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality (WDEQ) has released findings from an evaluation of Lonesome Lake and Big Sandy Lake. The study indicates that E. coli levels in both lakes met state water quality standards for recreational uses during the summer of 2025.

What changed

The Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality (WDEQ) Water Quality Division, in collaboration with the Shoshone National Forest, has published findings from an evaluation of Lonesome Lake and Big Sandy Lake. The study, conducted in the summer of 2025, utilized E. coli as the fecal bacteria indicator and concluded that both lakes met Wyoming's water quality standards for recreational uses. This evaluation was initiated following a 2022 sample that showed elevated levels of enterococci.

This notice serves as an informational update for regulated entities and the public regarding water quality status. No immediate compliance actions are required based on these findings, as the lakes were found to be in compliance with existing standards. The full Sampling and Analysis Plan and Summary Report are available on the WDEQ website for reference.

Source document (simplified)

January 14, 2026 - In Water Quality By kguille 0

Findings from the Lonesome Lake and Big Sandy Lake Fecal Bacteria Evaluation

Statewide, Wyo – The Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality (WDEQ) Water Quality Division (WQD), in collaboration with the Shoshone National Forest (SNF), completed an evaluation of Lonesome Lake and Big Sandy Lake, indicating that Escherichia coli (E. coli) samples collected in the summer of 2025 attained state water quality standards for recreational uses.

WDEQ and SNF initiated a study of the two popular Wind River Range wilderness lakes following a 2022 sample from a national study that showed elevated levels of enterococci, a fecal bacteria indicator. The study team launched a six-month effort to design and execute a scientifically defensible Sampling and Analysis Plan (SAP) to provide a more complete picture of fecal bacteria conditions at these popular backcountry lakes using the E. Coli fecal bacteria indicator that is adopted into Wyoming’s water quality standards for protecting designated recreation uses.

Key Findings and Highlights:

  • Low Fecal Bacteria Levels: Lonesome Lake and Big Sandy Lake had very low E. coli levels during the study period and attained the recreational use criteria defined in Wyoming’s Water Quality Rules.
  • Study Design: Staff conducted five sampling events within a targeted 60-day period (July 16 – September 15, 2025) at multiple sites on both remote lakes, strategically choosing locations near high-traffic recreational and camping areas.
  • Study Focus: The evaluation specifically focused on E. coli fecal bacteria, which is the water quality indicator adopted in Wyoming’s Water Quality Rules for evaluating recreational use attainment. (While the 2022 fecal bacteria indicator result was based on enterococci, the state uses E. coli to evaluate attainment for recreational use. EPA epidemiological studies and meta-analyses indicate E. coli is a more reliable predictor of human illness risk than enterococci in freshwater recreational systems. Forty-five states use E. coli for freshwater recreation criteria; of these, 39 exclusively use E. coli while six use both E. coli and enterococci)
  • Quality Assurance/Quality Control (QA/QC): The study employed stringent QA/QC procedures, with all duplicate samples and blanks confirming the integrity and scientific defensibility of the final data set. Resources:

The complete Sampling and Analysis Plan and Summary Report for the study can be found on the WDEQ website.

Previous Wyoming DEQ adds mobile air quality monitor to Rawlins Next WDEQ Celebrates Professional Water and Wastewater Operators

Leave Your Comment

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State DEQ
Published
January 14th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies
Geographic scope
State (Wyoming)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Environmental Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Water Quality Public Health

Get Environment alerts

Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when deq.wyoming.gov publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.