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Chapter 11 Water and Environment

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Title: Chapter 11 Water and Environment


1
Chapter 11Water and Environment
Big Question Can We Maintain our Water Resources
for Future Generations?
2
Case StudyThe Colorado River
  • A study of Water Resources Management, Water
    Pollution, and Environment

3
  • Two reservoirs (Hoover and Glen Canyon Dam) hold
    80 of Colorado River basin water

4
  • 1996 experiment water was released for a week
  • Flood created 55 new sandbars and made 75 of
    existing sandbars bigger
  • Rejuvenated marshes and backwater habitats

5
Water
  • No water means no life
  • High capacity to absorb and store heat
  • The universal solvent
  • Solid water is lighter than liquid water
  • Sunlight penetrates water to variable depths

6
A Brief Global Perspective
  • Growing global water shortage linked to our food
    supply
  • Main process in cycle global transfer of water

7
  • Most of Earths water is unusable for us
  • Compared with other resources, water is used in
    very large quantities
  • Can we avoid water shortages?

8
Water Sources
  • Two main sources groundwater and surface water
  • Groundwater
  • Upper surface of the groundwater is the water
    table
  • An aquifer is an underground layer of rock, sand,
    or gravel containing usable significant amounts
    of groundwater

9
Groundwater and surface water flow system
10
  • Surface water streams, rivers, and lakes
  • Streams are classified as
  • Effluent or influent
  • Perennial or ephemeral
  • Streams may have both perennial and ephemeral
    reaches

11
  • Surface water and groundwater are parts of same
    resource

12
Desalination
  • Turning sea water into freshwater
  • Getting less expensive, but still more than
    traditional water supplies in U.S.
  • Desalinated water has a place value the price
    rises depending on how far water must move from
    plant
  • Environmental impact of discharge

13
Water Supply
  • Water isnt always where it is needed.
  • Depends on hydrologic cycle
  • - rates of precipitation, evaporation, and
    transpiration
  • How useful is precipitation water?
  • How much water do people use?
  • Groundwater is popular for drinking, but can be
    expensive

14
  • Problem of overdraft - taking more groundwater
    than is naturally replaced

15
Off-Stream and In-Stream Water Use
  • Off-stream use removing water from source to use
    elsewhere
  • In-stream use using water right where it is

16
  • Example Aral Sea in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
  • The Aral Sea is drying up and dying due to
    diversion of water for agriculture
  • Wake-up call about environmental damage

17
Transport of Water
  • Moving water to where it is needed is not a new
    idea
  • New York City has imported water for over 100
    years
  • Today a lot of water comes from upstate forests
  • Catskills water was filtered effectively by
    natural processes

18
  • This natural service became overwhelmed by local
    development and pollution
  • New York City decided on sewage treatment rather
    than water treatment in Catskills
  • Good water quality maintained by offering
    financial incentives to areas farmers and
    homeowners
  • Transporting water has its limits

19
Some Trends in Water Use
  • Managing and conserving water has improved
  • Major water use is irrigation and thermoelectric
    industry
  • Irrigation water use began to level off around
    1980
  • Thermoelectric and other industries peaked in
    1980
  • Use of public and rural water supplies continued
    to increase during 19501995

20
Water ConservationAgricultural Use
  • Controlling agricultural use is key
  • Price water to encourage conservation
  • Use lined or covered canals to reduce seepage
  • Computer monitoring and scheduled release
  • Irrigate when less water is lost to evaporation
  • Use improved irrigation systems
  • Improve soil for easier water penetration
  • Integrate surface water and groundwater use
  • Develop crops requiring less water

21
Comparison of agricultural practices in 1990 with
what they might be by 2020
22
Domestic Use
  • Domestic use of water is a small part of the
    total but often a big local problem
  • Many urban areas in the United States are already
    experiencing the impact of population growth on
    their water supply
  • What are some ways to use less water at home?

23
Possible Solutions
  • In semiarid regions, replace lawns with
    decorative gravels and native plants
  • Use more efficient bathroom fixtures
  • Fix all leaks quickly
  • Use dishwashers and washing machines that use
    less water
  • Sweep sidewalks and driveways instead of hosing
    them

24
More possible solutions
  • Wash cars at a car wash, where water may be
    reused
  • Consider using gray water
  • Water lawns and plants in the early morning, late
    afternoon, or at night
  • Use drip irrigation and mulch garden plants
  • Plant drought-resistant vegetation

25
  • Industry and Manufacturing Use
  • Room for improvement
  • curb water withdrawals by water treatment and
    recycling
  • Perception and Water Use
  • How people view their water supply affects how
    much they use

26
Sustainability and Water Management
  • Water is essential to sustain life and maintain
    ecological systems
  • Sustainable Water Use
  • Develop sufficient water resources for human
    health
  • Provide sufficient water resources for healthy
    ecosystems
  • Ensure minimum standards of water quality
  • Protect long-term water resource renewability
  • Promote water-efficient technology and practice
  • Gradually eliminate water-pricing policies
    encouraging wasteful use

27
Water Management and the Environment
  • Moving water from one area to another isnt easy
  • This creates a good deal of controversy

28
Wetlands
  • Common feature wet for part of year and have
    particular type of vegetation and soil
  • Include salt marshes, swamps, bogs, prairie
    potholes, and vernal pools

29
  • We need wetlands
  • Natural sponge
  • Groundwater recharge (water seeps into ground)
  • Nursery grounds for fish, shellfish, aquatic
    birds, and other animals
  • Natural filters that help purify water
  • Highly productive
  • Coastal buffer from storms and high waves
  • Storage sites for organic carbon
  • Aesthetically pleasing

30
  • Freshwater wetlands are threatened
  • Over 50 of the wetlands in the US have
    disappeared
  • Salt marshes have also suffered
  • The San Francisco Bay estuary
  • Redirecting the Mississippi is leading to loss of
    coastal wetlands

31
Preserving and Restoring Wetlands
  • Offer incentives to wetlands owners
  • Related management issue is restoration of
    wetlands
  • Construct wetlands to clean up agricultural
    runoff
  • Creation of wetlands in Florida to help restore
    Everglades

32
Dams and the Environment
  • Dam effects include
  • Loss of land, cultural resources, and biological
    resources
  • Storage of sediment behind the dam
  • Fragmentation of river ecosystems
  • Downstream changes in hydrology and in sediment
    transport

33
  • Some dams are being removed
  • Example Edwards Dam near Augusta, Maine

34
  • In contrast, China has recently constructed
    worlds largest dam on the Yangtze River

35
  • Dams may produce false sense of security
  • One positive is dams production of electricity
  • More and bigger dams likely if current use
    continues

36
Channelization and theEnvironment
  • Channelization straightening, deepening,
    widening, clearing, or lining existing stream
    channels
  • Can harm environment
  • Loss of important fish habitats
  • Removal of vegetation along stream banks
  • Downstream flooding where channelized flow ends
  • Loss of wetlands from drained source water
  • Aesthetic degradation

37
Case StudyKissimmee River, Florida
  • Turning a winding river into a straight ditch and
    back again
  • Restoration of Kissimmee River has been no small
    task
  • Not all channelization causes serious
    environmental degradation

38
Flooding
  • Natural hazard in a floodplain
  • Flooding has many benefits for the environment
  • Water and nutrients stored on floodplains
  • Deposits contribute to formation of nutrient-rich
    soils
  • Floodplain wetlands provide important habitat
  • Floodplain functions as a natural greenbelt

39
  • Natural flooding is only a problem if people live
    on floodplains
  • Example Flooding as a result of levee failure on
    Mississippi River in 1993

40
Urbanization and Flooding
  • What happens when you build towns and cities in
    drainage basins?
  • Faster runoff increases risk of flooding
  • Flooding from urbanization can be reduced in
    several ways
  • Store runoff in retention ponds or parking lots
  • Limit urbanization of floodplains
  • Relying on dams, levees, and floodwalls is a
    mistake

41
Global Water ShortageLinked to Food Supply
  • Isolated water shortages are indicators of a
    larger global pattern
  • Surface and groundwater are being stressed and
    depleted
  • Groundwater being used faster than it is renewed
  • Large water bodies drying up, i.e. Aral Sea
  • Large rivers running dry before reaching the ocean

42
  • Water demand has tripled during the past
    half-century
  • Will the supply be sufficient to grow crops for
    the future population?
  • For sustainable water resources, we must control
    human population growth

43
Water Pollution
  • Water pollution lowers quality of water
  • Lack of clean drinking water is widespread
  • problem killing several million people a year
  • The quality of water determines its potential
    uses.
  • Many processes and materials may pollute surface
    or groundwater
  • EPA sets limits for water pollutants
  • More people means more pollutants and greater use
    of water resources

44
Sources of Pollution
  • Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) amount of oxygen
    consumed by microorganisms breaking down organic
    matter
  • Streams and rivers carry organic waste

45
  • Waterborne Disease public-health programs have
    largely eliminated water-borne disease in the
    United States by treating water
  • Fecal Coliform Bacteria an indicator of
  • disease potential
  • One type, Escherichia coli (E. coli), has caused
    illness and death

46
  • Threat of disease causes thousands of warnings
    and beach closings each year

47
Nutrients
  • Land use causes two nutrients to pollute water
  • Phosphorus and nitrogen
  • May be associated with fertilizers, detergents,
    and products of sewage-treatment plants.
  • Large industrial chicken and hog farms are big
    contributors

48
  • Example North Carolina, 1999
  • Floodwaters from Hurricane Floyd carried
    thousands of dead pigs, with their waste matter,
    through schools, homes, businesses

49
  • People, not a hurricane, caused this
    environmental disaster
  • What is the lesson?
  • Has it been learned in North Carolina?

50
Eutrophication
  • Cultural Eutrophication a body of water develops
    a high concentration of nutrients
  • Nutrients increase growth of aquatic plants,
    bacteria, and algae

51
  • As bacteria and algae die, they are decomposed by
    aerobic bacteria
  • Reduction of oxygen causes death of other
    organisms

52
  • Fish do not die from phosphorus poisoning
  • Cultural eutrophication is not limited to lakes
  • Example The dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico
  • Oxygen content is low because of cultural
    eutrophication associated with agriculture in the
    Mississippi River drainage basin
  • The level of nitrogen in the river water has
    leveled off

53
  • Possible fixes
  • Reduce fertilizer use
  • Restore and create river wetlands
  • Use nitrogen-reduction processes at wastewater
    treatment plants
  • No easy solution to cultural eutrophication in
    the dead zone

54
  • Oil Oil spills make headlines, routine discharge
    of oil does not
  • Long-term effects of large oil spills are
    uncertain
  • Sediment By volume and mass, sediment is our
    greatest water pollutant
  • Many human activities affect runoff, erosion, and
    sedimentation

55
  • Acid Mine Drainage Water from mines has high
    concentrations of sulfuric acid
  • Produced when water contacts rock or tailings
    that contain iron sulfide
  • A significant water-pollution problem in many
    states

56
Surface-Water Pollution
  • Pollutants are categorized as coming from point
    or non-point sources
  • point sources are distinct and confined, such as
    pipes
  • non-point sources are less distinct, and include
    runoff from streets or fields

57
  • Dealing with surface-water pollution
  • Reduce the sources
  • Treat the water to remove pollutants
  • Convert the pollutants to forms that can be
    disposed of safely

58
  • Cities are undoing damage theyve done to rivers
  • Example Cuyahoga River, Ohio

59
Groundwater Pollution
  • Groundwater differs from surface water because
  • There is a low oxygen concentration
  • Breakdown of pollutants does not occur readily
  • Water moves slowly through very small and
    variable channels
  • Groundwater can be easily polluted by several
    sources

60
Principles of Groundwater Pollution An Example
  • Old, leaking underground gasoline tanks have
    polluted water and soil
  • Cleanup is expensive and involves
  • Soil removal and disposal
  • Vapor extraction treatment of water
  • Bioremediation by microorganisms

61
Some Important Points about Groundwater Pollutants
  • Some pollutants are lighter than water and thus
    float on groundwater
  • Some pollutants are heavier than water and sink
    through groundwater
  • Some pollutants have multiple phases liquid,
    vapor, and dissolved
  • Cleanup cost and potential harm to life means
    that the emphasis should be on preventing
    pollutants from entering groundwater in the first
    place

62
Another Example Long Island, New York
  • The most serious groundwater problem on Long
    Island is shallow-aquifer pollution stemming from
    urbanization
  • Sources of pollution include urban runoff,
    household, salt used to de-ice highways,
    fertilizers, pesticides, industrial and solid
    waste, and landfills

63
Water Treatment
  • Most water sources are treated to conform with
    national drinking water standards
  • Water is first stored, then filtered and treated
  • Drinking water in the United States is among the
    safest in the world
  • However, we need to know much more about the
    long-term effects of exposure to low
    concentrations of toxins in our drinking water

64
Wastewater Treatment
  • Degraded waters must be treated before being
    released back into the environment
  • Conventional methods include septic tanks in
    rural areas and treatment plants in cities

65
Septic-Tank Disposal Systems
  • How does a septic-tank disposal system work?

66
  • Sewage drain fields may fail for several reasons
  • failure to pump out the septic tank when it is
    full of solids
  • poor soil drainage, which allows the wastewater
    to rise to the surface in wet weather

67
Treatment Plants
  • Wastewater treatment has three categories
  • Primary treatment removes 3040 of the BOD from
    the wastewater
  • Secondary treatment uses bacteria to digest about
    90 of the BOD that entered the plant in the
    sewage
  • Advanced treatment is used when additional
    treatment is required
  • Nitrogen and phosphorus removal

68
Wastewater Treatment Plant
69
Boston Harbor Cleaning Up a National Treasure
  • More than tea has been dumped into the harbor
    since 1773
  • Moving waste disposal farther offshore is a step
    should dilute the pollutants and is a step in the
    right direction
  • Any long-term solution must include reducing the
    amount of pollutants at their source
  • Deer Island sewage treatment plant

70
Land Application of WastewaterAn Old Practice
Made Cleaner
  • Land application of untreated human waste was a
    traditional practice
  • Today, wastewater is being applied successfully
    to wetlands which are effective in treating
  • Municipal and industrial wastewater
  • Storm-water runoff
  • Agricultural wastewater and runoff
  • Mining waters
  • Groundwater seeping from landfills

71
  • Using wetlands to treat wastewater is
    economically attractive.
  • The state of Louisiana also uses its wetlands to
    treat wastewater

72
  • In arid regions, wetlands can be constructed to
    treat poor-quality water
  • Example Avondale, Arizona

73
Water Reuse
  • In Las Vegas, new resort hotels that use a great
    deal of water for fountains, rivers, canals, and
    lakes are required to treat wastewater and reuse
    it

74
Water Pollution and Environmental Law
  • Federal laws to protect water resources go back
    to the Refuse Act of 1899, enacted to protect
    streams, rivers, and lakes from pollution caused
    by navigation
  • The mid-1990s was a time of controversy about
    U.S. water pollution
  • Congress attempted to give industry more
    flexibility in choosing how to comply with water
    pollution regulations

75
  • Apparently, Congress misread the publics values
    on this issue
  • There is strong support for a clean environment
    in the United States, and people are willing to
    pay to have clean air and clean water
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