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Water Pollution Chapter 20. Case Study: A River on Fire  Cuyahoga River  Cleveland, Ohio (1969)  Spurred major Amendments to Clean Water Act.

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Presentation on theme: "Water Pollution Chapter 20. Case Study: A River on Fire  Cuyahoga River  Cleveland, Ohio (1969)  Spurred major Amendments to Clean Water Act."— Presentation transcript:

1 Water Pollution Chapter 20

2 Case Study: A River on Fire  Cuyahoga River  Cleveland, Ohio (1969)  Spurred major Amendments to Clean Water Act

3 Water Pollution Comes from Point and Nonpoint Sources  Water pollution is any chemical, biological, or physical change in water quality that harms living organisms or makes water unsuitable for desired uses.  Underlying causes are industrialization and rapid human population growth.

4 Point Source Pollution  Point-source pollution is pollution that comes from a specific site.  Examples:

5 Point Source Pollution

6 Point Source of Polluted Water in Gargas, France

7 Nonpoint Source Pollution  Non-point source pollution is pollution that comes from many sources rather than from a single specific site.  Example:

8 Nonpoint Source Pollution

9 Nonpoint Sediment from Unprotected Farmland Flows into Streams

10 Water Pollution Comes from Point and Nonpoint Sources  Agriculture activities: leading cause of water pollution  Industrial facilities  Mining

11 Water Pollution Comes from Point and Nonpoint Sources  Other sources of water pollution Parking lots Human-made materials E.g., plastics

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13 Major Water Pollutants Have Harmful Effects  Infectious disease organisms: contaminated drinking water  The World Health Organization (WHO) 3 Million people die every year, mostly under the age of 5

14 Major Water Pollutants and Their Sources

15 Common Diseases Transmitted to Humans through Contaminated Drinking Water

16 Science Focus: Testing Water for Pollutants (1)  Variety of tests to determine water quality:  Coliform bacteria: Escherichia coli, significant levels  Level of dissolved oxygen (DO)  Chemical analysis determines presence of organic chemicals

17 DO Seasonal Variation: DO & Temp Inverse Relationship

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20 Science Focus: Testing Water for Pollutants (2)  Indicator species  Bacteria and yeast glow in the presence of a particular toxic chemical  Color and turbidity (cloudiness) of the water

21 Secchi Disk

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24 Water Quality as Measured by Dissolved Oxygen Content in Parts per Million

25 Streams Can Cleanse Themselves If We Do Not Overload Them  Dilution  Biodegradation of wastes by bacteria takes time  Oxygen sag curve

26 Dilution and Decay of Degradable, Oxygen-Demanding Wastes in a Stream

27 Stream Pollution in Developed Countries  1970s: Water pollution control laws  Successful water clean-up stories Ohio Cuyahoga River, U.S. Thames River, Great Britain  Accidental/Deliberate contamination of toxic inorganic and organic chemicals by industries and mines

28 Global Outlook: Stream Pollution in Developing Countries  Half of the world’s 500 rivers are polluted  Untreated sewage & Industrial waste  India’s rivers  China’s rivers

29 Girl Sits on the Edge of a Road beside a Stream Loaded with Raw Sewage in Iraq

30 Natural Capital Degradation: Highly Polluted River in China

31 Trash Truck Disposing of Garbage into a River in Peru

32 Case Study: India’s Ganges River: Religion, Poverty, Population Growth, and Health (1)  Holy river: religious customs  Sewage  Human remains  Government intervention

33 Low Water Flow and Too Little Mixing Makes Lakes Vulnerable to Water Pollution  More vulnerable than streams  Less effective at diluting pollutants than streams

34 Cultural Eutrophication Is Too Much of a Good Thing (1)  Eutrophication – nutrient enrichment  Oligotrophic lake  Cultural eutrophication

35 Natural Eutrophication

36 Algae/Cyanobacteria

37 Duckweed

38 Water Hyacinth – Invasive Species

39 The Great Lakes of North America

40 Round Goby


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