Title: WATER WORLD
1 WATER WORLD
2NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
- gt 2/3rds of the earth is water
- gt 97 of earths water is salt water
- gt 2 of fresh water is locked in glaciers and
polar ice caps - lt 1 is available as surface water and ground
water
3lt 1 IS ALL WE HAVE!
Ron Nichols - NRCS
4 LIMNOLOGY
- The study of physical , chemical, biological, and
meteorological conditions in Fresh Water
Ecosystems - Our focus will be on fresh-water, both as a
resource and a critical habitat
5OUR WATER SOURCES
- Surface Water
- Lentic Lotic
-
- Ground Water
-
NOAA
Bruce Molnia Terra Photographics
Abi Howe American Geologic Institute
6 SURFACE WATER
- Glaciers formed Massachusetts wetlands some 10 to
12,000 years ago
Bruce Molnia Terra Photographics
7WETLANDS
- Lands that are wet, either inundated or saturated
for varying periods during the growing season - identified by specific plants (hydrophytes) and
characteristic hydric soils - critical habitat type
- historically underappreciated resource
- weve lost more than 50 nationally
- valued now more than ever for
- wildlife and plant habitats
- flood control
- ground and surface water purification
- sediment control
- aesthetics
Wayne College
- Massachusetts wetlands include
- swamps, bogs, marshes, salt marshes,
- kettle holes, lakes, ponds, rivers, streams,
and vernal pools
8 LAKES AND PONDS
Lake Monomonac MA COLAP
VT Dept. of Environmental Conservation
Lacustrine Wetlands permanently
flooded
9RESERVOIRS
- Also known as lacustrine wetland
- man made Waterbodies
- provide drinking water to communities across the
Commonwealth - provide recreational opportunities such as
fishing, hiking, and nature watching - provide buffer from development
- largest reservoirs are Quabbin and Wachusett
10 SWAMPS, BOGS, MARSHES
VT Dept. of Environmental Conservation
- Palustrine wetlands which are some of the more
common wetlands of Massachusetts. Swamps are
dominated by woody plants, Bogs are peatlands
lacking an overlying layer of soil, and Marshes
are flooded year round and have visible emergents
(vegetation that grows its stem above and below
the water level.
11VERNAL POOLS
Vernal Pool Association Leo P. Kenney
- shallow depressions in the landscape without a
permanent outlet capable of holding water for
several months while supporting certain
amphibians, and invertabrates - typically filled in the spring (latin vernal)
from snow melt and spring rains - some pools fill in the fall with rising ground
water tables - some fill from both sources
- drying of pool is a critical feature of these
habitats as it prevents the pool from supporting
breeding populations of fish
12RIVERINE HABITATS
- includes streams, rivers, and streamside wetlands
- includes habitat along rivers and streams known
as riparian zones
Oklahoma University
Bruce Molnia Terra photographics
Chris Keane American Geological Institute
13OCEANS
- average depth is 12,200 feet
- deepest point is 36, 198 feet
- 75 of all organisms on earth are exclusively or
primarily marine - 1/3 to 1/2 of earths oxygen supply comes from
our oceans - provide us with a steady source of precipitation
due to large volume of evaporation - help to regulate our climate due to waters high
heat capacity
Bruce Molnia Terra Photographics
14GROUND WATER
USGS
15Ground Water Terms
- Water Table
- Aquifer
-
- Infiltration
- Recharge
- Discharge
- Porosity
- Permeability
- Ground water Movement
USGS
16GROUND WATER USE
All USGS
17GROUND WATERUSE TRENDS
USGS
18AQUATIC CONCEPTS
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20WATER SHED
US Environmental Protection Agency
21Oklahoma University
22THERMAL STRATIFICATION
Ohio State University
23Ohio State University
24Ohio State University
25Ohio State University
26Ohio State University
27EUTROPHICATION
The natural aging process of a lake or pond
- OLIGOTROPHIC
- lakes and ponds just after the glaciers
retreated - very clear
- nutrient poor
- low productivity
- similar to our modern reservoirs
- MESOTROPHIC
- a middle aged lake or pond
- like many Massachusetts waterbodies
- moderate clarity, nutrient levels, and
productivity
- EUTROPHIC
- high algae levels
- high plant levels
- nutrient rich
- very productive
- mature waterbody
28CULTURAL EUTROPHICATION
University of Manitoba
Experimental lake 227 in 1975 showing marker
floats used for intensively studying this small,
experimentally fertilized lake
29University of Manitoba
Experimental Lake 227 in 1994 after the addition
of phosphorous for the 26th consecutive year
30 ALTERATIONS TO WETLANDS
Martin Miller University of Oregon
channeled river
31Martin Miller University of Oregon
golf course in a desert environment
32Filling wetlands for housing development in
the Florida everglades
33Tom Sims University of Delaware
runoff from agricultural croplands
34Creation of the Quabbin Reservoir
before
1927
1939
during
after
1989
Les Campbell
35Hoover Dam
DAMS
Resulting Lake (Lake Meade)
Lynn Betts - NRCS
Complete Change in habitat from riverine to
lacustrine
Bruce Molnia Terra Photographics
36WATER POLLUTION
Point Source
Non Point Source
EPA
USGS
37WATER QUALITY
USGS
38 DETERMINING WATER QUALITY
USGS
Ron Nichols - NRCS
USGS
39Dissolved Oxygen
Biochemical Oxygen Demand
Temperature
pH
Nitrates
WQI
Coliform Bacteria
Turbidity
Phosphorous
Total Solids
40What does this index tell us?
- Water Quality Index Ranges
- 90 100 excellent
- 70 90 good
- 50 70 medium
- 25 50 bad
- 0 25 very bad
- drinking
- Swimming
- boating
- fishing
- irrigation
Uses
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