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AE 520 Agricultural Water Quality Engineering

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Title: AE 520 Agricultural Water Quality Engineering


1
AE 520Agricultural Water Quality Engineering
  • Carl E. Anderson
  • 206a Davidson Hall
  • 294-0204
  • 233-2051

2
AE 520Course Objectives
  • To give the student a background understanding of
    water quality concerns and the impact of
    chemicals on the agricultural environment and
    agricultural workers

3
AE 520Course Objectives
  • To provide the student with a background
    understanding of the processes and factors which
    determine the fate of chemicals in the
    agricultural environment

4
AE 520Course Objectives
  • To teach the student how to quantify the rates of
    the processes involved in the transport and
    transformation of agricultural chemicals

5
AE 520Course Objectives
  • To teach student how to evaluate a system which
    utilizes agricultural chemicals and predict the
    level of control of these chemicals within the
    system using mathematical models.

6
AE 520Course Objectives
  • To help students understand, design and evaluate
    the alternatives available in dealing with
    chemicals in the agricultural environment.

7
Student Performance Assessment
  • Two exams 40
  • Final Exam 20
  • Weekly assignments 20
  • Term Project 20
  • Total 100

8
LITERATURE REVIEW ASSIGNMENTS
  • Each week you are expected to review on article
    from a refereed journal dealing with a topic
    being discussed in class during that week. The
    grading for this assignment will be as follows
  • 3 points for how well the article fits the topic
    for the week. No popular publication articles
    and no chapters from books are allowed.
  • 3 points for a well-written one-paragraph
    summary of the article in your own words.
  • 3 points for a one paragraph critique of the
    article. What is the practical importance of the
    information presented in the article? How
    clearly is it written? Are the conclusions
    reasonable, and well supported in the article?
  • 1 point for general length and appearance. The
    paper should be no more than one page
    typewritten.
  • Give the complete citation for this article in a
    standard format. Also include the library
    reference numbers.

9
Define Water Quality
10
How do we judge water quality?
It was crawlin' and it stunk but of all the
drinks I've drunk I'm greatfullest to one from
Gunga Din Gunga Din by Rudyard Kipling
11
Agricultural Water Quality
  • List 5 ways we use water.
  • (not limited to agriculture)

12
WATER QUALITY CONCERNSHow would you rank these?
  • Effects on Domestic Livestock
  • Effects on plant growth
  • Effects on Wildlife
  • Human health hazards
  • Aesthetics (taste, odor, color, appearance)
  • Suitable for industrial uses

13
CLASSES OF AGRICULTURALPOLLUTANTS
  • SEDIMENT
  • Surface water, fish, recreation, aesthetics
  • PLANT NUTRIENTS
  • Nitrates mostly in ground water and Phosphorous
    and Potassium in both surface and ground water.
    Nitrates cause health effects for babies and the
    elderly, and for fish.

14
CLASSES OF AGRICULTURALPOLLUTANTS
  • ANIMAL WASTES
  • High Organic loading(BOD), Biological
    contamination (some disease potential), nutrient
    problems.
  • PESTICIDES
  • Concerns about human health hazards, including
    cancer. More common in surface waters. The
    effects on ground water quality are still largely
    unknown.
  • SALTS
  • High concentrations are poor for drinking. Most
    impact is on plant growth. Some are toxic. High
    salt concentration can be a problem in steam
    power generation.

15
Chemicals in the Environment
  • Chemical Transport The processes that move
    chemicals through the environment.
  • Chemical Fate The eventual disposition, either
    destruction or long-term storage, of chemicals in
    the environment.

16
Point Source Pollution The pollution comes out
of a pipe. Flow is controlled. This kind of
pollution source is most easily identified
and controlled. Usually associated with the
discharge from an industry or waste collection
facility. Non-point Source Pollution (NPS)
The source of the pollution is distributed in
the environment. Flow occurs in response to
natural precipitation events. Most pollution
from Agricultural activities is NPS pollution.
64 of the NPS pollution in US rivers is
from Agriculture. The greatest type of NPS
pollution is Sediment.
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