Facts on Ocean Pollution Over 80% of the pollution in the ocean is runoff from the Land Almost 90% of all floating materials in the ocean are plastic.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 20 Water Pollution Dontae Landley Laura Alzate Period 3.
Advertisements

Section #3: Water Pollution
Environmental Science 2012
TENNYSON BEN-KALIO A CHE 120 PROF. WAN JIN JANHG.
Objectives Compare point-source pollution and nonpoint-source pollution. Classify water pollutants by five types. Explain why groundwater pollution is.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Marine Pollution Marine pollution.
Quick Facts about the Ocean Our Planet is made up of 70% water. There Is 326,000,000,000,000,000,0 00 gallons (326 million trillion gallons of water.
Ocean Pollution. Think about it…. How could ocean pollution affect your life? Think of ways you contribute to ocean pollution in your daily life.
Our community of 20 families live in a coastal area and are very poor. They depend of fish for money and food, and have found it harder and harder recently,
Marine Pollution. Marine pollution threatens resources Even into the mid-20th century, coastal U.S. cities dumped trash and untreated sewage along their.
Freshwater Pollution.
Did you know that the water we use today is the same water the dinosaurs used? We cannot create new water. For millions of years, the water we have has.
Water Pollution.
Sources: 1. sewage, industrial wastes, agricultural wastes 2. ocean dumping 3. oil spills.
Types of Water Pollution Sewage Disease-causing agents Sediment pollution Inorganic plant and algal nutrients Organic compounds Inorganic chemicals Thermal.
Environmental Health Unit: Water Pollution Lesson
Do Now: Movie: Plastic Bottles and the Ocean Copy the questions into your notebook. While watching the movie answer the following: 1)How many animals are.
Water pollution Why is it dangerous? Bilateral Partner Project
Section 3, Water Pollution
Environmental Health Unit: Water Pollution Lesson
WHAT IS HAPPENING TO HARM OUR WATER SUPPLY? “When the well is dry, we learn the worth of water.” - Benjamin Franklin 1.
Definition, sources and causes
Pollution.
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Chapter 11 Water 11.3 Water Pollution.
Biodiversity and Conservation 5.2- Threats to Biodiversity part 2 SPI 4 Predict how various types of human activities affect the environment. SPI 5 Make.
Chapter 11 Section 3 Water Pollution Environmental Science Spring 2011.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. AP Environmental Science Mr. Grant Lesson 78 Marine Pollution.
Water Pollution.
Sea Pollution Pollution is a serious problem to the world and has taken a big chunk of sea animals population, and as touched peoples hearts. It effects.
Water Chapter 5 Part II.
The Dangers of Water Pollution The Ocean The Ocean holds the largest of Earth’s biomes. It covers 70% of the planet’s surface. There are many different.
Water Pollution Chapter 11 Section Three The water you pollute may be your own!
 Water pollution can come from a number of different sources. If the pollution comes from a single source, such as an oil spill, it is called point-source.
WaterSection 3 Water Pollution Water pollution is the introduction into water of waste matter or chemicals that are harmful to organisms living in the.
Ocean Pollution. What is pollution? Pollution occurs when an environment is contaminated, or dirtied, by waste, chemicals, trash, and other harmful substances.
Section 3, Water Pollution
Chapter 11 Section 3 Water Pollution.
Water Pollution.
Components of water pollution
Section 3: Water Pollution
Marine Pollution The introduction by man, directly, or indirectly, of substances or energy to the marine environment resulting in deleterious effects such.
Objectives Compare point-source pollution and nonpoint-source pollution. Classify water pollutants by five types. Explain why groundwater pollution is.
Section 3: Water Pollution
Ocean Pollution.
Section 3: Water Pollution
Section 3, Water Pollution
Notepack 26 Water Pollution.
Pick a science word and write the definition. Chapter 14
Section 3, Water Pollution
Section 3: Water Pollution
Water Pollution.
Point-source pollution
Section 3: Water Pollution
Water Pollution contamination of water bodies (e.g. lakes, rivers, oceans, aquifers and groundwater occurs when pollutants are directly or indirectly discharged.
Marine Pollution Pages 102 & 103.
Section 3: Water Pollution
Bellringer.
Section 3, Water Pollution
Section 3: Water Pollution
Section 3: Water Pollution
Section 3, Water Pollution
Section 3, Water Pollution
Section 3, Water Pollution
Section 3, Water Pollution
Section 3, Water Pollution
Point-source pollution
Section 3, Water Pollution
Water Pollution Chapter 11.
Water Treatment & Pollution: What will I be learning about today
Section 3: Water Pollution
Presentation transcript:

Facts on Ocean Pollution Over 80% of the pollution in the ocean is runoff from the Land Almost 90% of all floating materials in the ocean are plastic Marine debris, especially plastic, kills more than one million seabirds and 100,000 mammals and sea turtles every year Dead Zones which are areas of oxygen deficient water were life ceases to exist, have increased drastically over the past decade.

Polluted by toxins Polluted by garbage

Types Of Pollution Oil Spills Fertilizers Sewage Pipes Chemicals

Garbage Oceans Plastic in Oceans

Oil Spills Oil spills have huge and immediate economic, social, and environmental impacts. Local people lose their livelihoods as fisheries and tourism areas are temporarily closed; the clean up costs are enormous; and tens of thousands of marine animals and plants are killed or harmed. And the damage goes on. The chemicals used to break up the oil can be toxic, and it's impossible to remove all the spilled oil. Even after an area has been cleaned up, it can take a decade or more to fully recover. There's also the problem of the oil that goes down with the ship, which can contaminate the seabed and marine organisms. This oil can also resurface. In 2001, a cyclone off the island of Yap in Micronesia disturbed the oil tanker USS Mississinewa, which was sunk during World War II. For two months, thousands of liters of oil and gasoline leaked out of the rusted ship wreck onto the beaches of the atoll, stopping the 700 islanders from fishing. There are hundreds of other shipwrecked tankers around the world.

Information on Oil Spills /peril_oil_pollution.html /peril_oil_pollution.html

Fertilizers Fertilizers that runoff from farms and lawns is a huge problem for coastal areas. The extra nutrients cause Eutrophication. The run off kills the Algae which depletes the water's dissolved oxygen and suffocate other marine life. Eutrophication is the addition of artificial or natural substances, such as nitrates and phosphates, through fertilizers or sewage, to an aquatic system. Eutrophication has created enormous dead zones in several parts of the world, including the Gulf of Mexico and the Baltic Sea

Information on Fertilizers cfm cfm eanic-dead-zones-spread eanic-dead-zones-spread

Sewage Pipes In many parts of the world, sewage flows untreated, or under- treated, into the ocean. For example, 80% of urban sewage discharged into the Mediterranean Sea is untreated. This sewage can also lead to eutrophication. In addition, it can cause human disease and lead to beach closures. Back to Polluted by toxins

Outside information on Sewage Pipes waste-outfall-broward _1_sewage-bills-reef- rescue-water-shortage waste-outfall-broward _1_sewage-bills-reef- rescue-water-shortage bursts-in-mexico-fouling-beaches-in-san-diego.html bursts-in-mexico-fouling-beaches-in-san-diego.html florida-pollution-idUSN florida-pollution-idUSN

Chemicals accumulate in organisms, becoming concentrated in their bodies and in the surrounding water or soil. These animals are in turn eaten by larger animals, which can travel large distances with an increased chemical load. People become contaminated either directly from household products or by eating contaminated seafood and animal fats. Evidence is mounting that a number of man- made chemicals can cause serious health problems - including cancer, damage to the immune system, behavioral problems, and reduced fertility. Chemicals

Information on Chemical Toxins /peril_toxins.html /peril_toxins.html n/public/?action_KEY= n/public/?action_KEY=4342

Garbage Dump There are several garbage oceans across the world but the biggest as large as the size of Texas is the Great Pacific Garbage Dump. These Dumps Can be dangerous to out animal wildlife and eventually effect our fish that we would eat in that area.

Information on Garbage Dump th/oceanography/great-pacific-garbage-patch.htm th/oceanography/great-pacific-garbage-patch.htm largest-dump largest-dump waste-dump/ waste-dump/

Plastic Unlike most other trash, plastic isn't biodegradable Sunlight does eventually break down the plastic, reducing it to smaller and smaller pieces, but that just makes matters worse. The plastic still never goes away, it just becomes microscopic and may be eaten by tiny marine organisms, entering the food chain. The world produced 300 billion pounds of plastic each year, about 10% ends up in the ocean, 70% of which eventually sinks

Outside information on Plastic icsarticle.html icsarticle.html