Chapter 21 Water Pollution. Types of Water Pollution  Water pollution  Any physical or chemical change in water that adversely affects the health of.

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 21 Water Pollution

Types of Water Pollution  Water pollution  Any physical or chemical change in water that adversely affects the health of humans and other organisms 1. Sewage 2. disease-causing agents 3. sediment pollution 4. inorganic plant and algal nutrients 5. organic compounds 6. inorganic chemicals 7. radioactive substances 8. thermal pollution

1. Sewage  Causes 2 serious environmental problems: 1. Enrichment  Fertilization of water by high levels N and P 2. Increase in Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD)  BOD-amount of oxygen needed by microorganisms to decompose biological wastes  BOD Dissolved Oxygen (DO)

Sewage

Sewage: Eutrophication  Oligotrophic  Unenriched, clear water that supports small populations of aquatic organisms

Sewage: Eutrophication  Eutrophic  Slow-flowing stream, lake or estuary enriched by inorganic plant and algal nutrients such as phosphorus

2. Disease-causing Agents  Infectious organisms that cause diseases  from wastes of infected individuals  Examples:  Typhoid, cholera, bacterial dysentery, polio, and infectious hepatitis India

3. Sediment Pollution  Excessive amounts of suspended soil particles. From:  erosion of agricultural lands lands  logging  degraded stream banks  overgrazing  mining  construction

4. Inorganic Plant and Algal Nutrients  Ex: N and P  Sources:  Human and animal wastes, plant residues, atmospheric deposition, and fertilizer runoff  It Causes:  Enrichment, bad odors, and a high BOD

Inorganic Plant and Algal Nutrients: The Dead Zone Hypoxia

5. Organic Compounds  Chemicals that contain carbon atoms  Natural examples: sugars, amino acids, and oils  Human-made examples: pesticides, solvents, industrial chemicals, and plastics, medication Dangerous!

Volatile Organic Compounds in Groundwater

Los Angeles

Seal Beach, CA

Depicts 60,000 plastic bags, the number used in the US every five seconds.

2 million bottles the number used by Americans every 5 minutes!

6. Inorganic Chemicals  Contaminants that contain elements other than carbon (ex: acids, salts, heavy metals)  Do not degrade easily  Examples:  Lead-  Mercury-

7. Radioactive Substances  Unstable isotopes that emit radiation  Sources:  Mining  Processing radioactive materials  Nuclear power plants  Natural sources

 Why is this bad?  Temperature affects reproductive cycles, digestion rates, and respiration rates  Warm water holds less DO than cold water 8. Thermal Pollution  Factories release heated water into waterways

Two Types of Water Pollution 1. Point Source Pollution  Water pollution that can be traced to a specific origin 2. Non-point Source Pollution  Pollutants that enter bodies of water over large areas rather than being concentrated at a single point of entry

Water Pollution from Agriculture  Agriculture is leading source of water pollution in US  Animal wastes and plants residues have high BOD  Chemical pesticides  Almost all streams and rivers are polluted with agricultural pesticides Important* There is little regulation!

Municipal Water Pollution

Industrial Wastes in Water  Different industries generate different pollutants  Food processing plants- high BOD  Paper mills- High BOD and toxic compounds  Green Chemistry

Groundwater Pollution

Water Pollution in Other Countries  Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela  Po River, Italy  Ganges River, India

Purification of Drinking Water  In US most municipal water supplies are treated

Purification of Drinking Water  Treated water distributed to customers

Purification of Drinking Water  Chlorine Dilemma  Chlorine byproducts are linked to numerous cancers, miscarriages and birth defects  Peru  Fluoridation  Prevents tooth decay  Linked to cancer, kidney disease

Municipal Sewage Treatment

Laws Controlling Water Pollution  Safe Drinking Water Act (1974)  Set uniform federal standards for drinking water including maximum contaminant level  Clean Water Act (1972)  EPA sets up and monitors National Emissions Limitations  Effectively improved water quality from point sources