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Water Pollution The introduction of chemical, physical or biological agents into water that degrade the quality of the water. How does water become polluted?

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Presentation on theme: "Water Pollution The introduction of chemical, physical or biological agents into water that degrade the quality of the water. How does water become polluted?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Water Pollution The introduction of chemical, physical or biological agents into water that degrade the quality of the water. How does water become polluted? Industrialization Population Growth

2 Point Source Pollution
One Source Power Plants Factories Industrial Facilities Waste Water Treatment Plants Easy to Identify Heavily Regulated

3 Love Canal Niagara Falls 36 sq. blocks 21,000 gallons
Hooker Chemical Company Landfill Toxic Chemicals 100 Homes School Birth Defects Cancer

4 Nonpoint Pollution Multiple Sources Carried by Rain Harder to spot
Oil and grease from cars Herbicides, pesticides and fertilizers from lawns Salt from roads Waste from livestock and septic systems Harder to spot Even harder to regulate Most important source of pollution

5 EPA Pollutants Microorganisms Disinfectants Disinfectant Byproducts
Inorganic Chemicals Organic Chemicals Radionuclides

6 Microorganisms Cryptosporidium, Giardia Rotifers Parasite
Diarrhea, Vomiting Human and Animal Fecal Waste Rotifers

7 Disinfection Byproducts
Disinfecting Drinking Water Cancer, Anemia, Liver & Kidney Disorders Bromates, Chlorite

8 Disinfectants Killing Microbes
Eye/nose irritation; stomach discomfort, anemia Chlorine

9 Inorganic Chemicals Refineries, Factories, Electronics, Pulp Mills
Intestinal Lesions, Allergic Dermatitis, Kidney Damage Arsenic Asbestos Lead Mercury

10 Organic Chemicals Herbicides, Chemical Factories, Insecticides
Cancer, Reproductive Difficulties, Liver & Kidney Problems, Cataracts, Cardiovascular Disease Benzene, Hexachlorocyclopentadiene, Styrene, Toluene

11 Radionuclides Erosion of Natural Deposits Cancer Radium, Uranium

12 Artificial Eutrophication
Introduction of excessive nutrients Fertilizer Manure Sewage

13 Artificial Eutrophication
Effects ↑ Plant biomass ↑ Algae ↑ Turbidity ↓O2

14 Artificial Eutrophication
Consequences Decrease in Water Flow Unsuitable for Human Consumption Fish Die Offs

15 Thermal Pollution The degradation of water quality by any process that changes the temperature of the water Industrial Discharge Electrical Generation

16 Thermal Pollution Environmental Effects Increased Turbidity
Sediment Loading Loss of Vegetation Thermal Shock Changes in Dissolved O2 Distribution of Organisms

17 Biological Magnification
Increase in concentration of pollutants in successive trophic levels Producer → Primary Consumer → Secondary Consumer → Tertiary Consumer Plant → 10 ppm Insect → 100 ppm Fish → 1,000 ppm Bird → 10,000 ppm

18 Biological Magnification
DDT Pesticide Does not break down Stored in fat Harmless to humans Bad for birds Interferes with calcium deposition in shells Shells soft & weak Shells break, chicks die

19 Biological Magnification
DDT Silent Spring Rachel Carson Banning of DDT Birth of modern environmental movement 1960’s

20 Biological Magnification
DDT Many pesticides have replaced DDT Better for birds Harmful to humans

21 Laws Protecting Water

22 Clean water Act 1972, amended in 1977 Regulate discharge of pollutants
Gave EPA authority to regulate pollution control Set water quality standards Surface water only

23 Safe Drinking Water Act
1975 Protect quality of drinking water Both ground water and surface water Set standards for water purity Requires public water systems to comply with health standards

24 Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act
CERCLA Superfund 1980 Owners of hazardous waste sites and those responsible for introducing toxins into environment responsible fo clean up Reduced ground water pollution

25 Water Quality Act 1987 Clean up polluted runoff
New waste water treatment plants Protect estuaries

26 International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships
MARPOL 1973, 1978 161 countries Discharges from ships Oil Sewage Garbage

27 Helsinki Convention 1974 120 countries
Control land based sources of ocean pollution Mercury Cadmium DDT

28 Oil Pollution Act 1990 Response to Exxon Valdez
All oil tankers required to have double hulls Plan to control and clean up spills

29 Marine Mammal Protection Act
1972 Prohibits any action that could harm or endanger marine mammals Ecosystem approach

30 Enforcement Who has jurisdiction Territorial Waters
Law of the Sea Treaty 1973 Territorial waters 12 nautical miles Exclusive Economic Zone 200 nautical miles What about the rest of the ocean?


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