Title: Hurricane Floyd
1Hurricane Floyd
- WILMINGTON, N.C.-The ruinous 1999 hurricane
season is forcing North Carolina officials to
reevaluate the tremendous coastal growth and
agricultural development in eastern North
Carolina over the past decade, touching
everything from how to save the rapidly eroding
beaches to what to do about livestock waste. - 51 people dead, 6 billion damage
- Drinking water has been contaminated, including
an estimated 800 private wells in Duplin County
alone. Shrinking beaches at Oak Island and North
Topsail Beach lost more ground.
Image September 15, 1999 http//earthobservatory.
nasa.gov/Study/FloydIntro/ Washington Post
article http//www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/nati
onal/daily/oct99/carolina24.htm
2- Hurricane Floyd generated what is described as a
500-year flood. - In many places, as much as 20 inches of rain fell
on ground already saturated by Hurricane Dennis. - The Tar and Neuse rivers, feeding into the
delicate sounds that serve as nurseries for many
types of fish and then on into the Atlantic
Ocean, spilled out of their banks.
Greenville, NC, Tar River overflowed its banks.
Its waters finally crested as high as 24 feet
above flood stage.
Many storage lagoons that contained livestock
sewage were flooded.
3- Brown sediments clogged coastal estuaries a week
after the storm, as seen in this Landsat 7 image
of the North Carolina coast taken September 23,
1999. Along with dirt swept away by the flood
waters, the estuaries filled with human and
animal waste, fertilizers, and pesticides. (Image
by Brian Montgomery, NASA GSFC)
4- Hog lagoons were flooded, wastewater treatment
plants were breeched, more than 2 million
chickens, turkeys and hogs drowned, and the scene
was set for an environmental mess never
encountered before in the state. Everything in
the flood's path was swept into this witches'
brew-chemicals, gasoline, fertilizers, dead
animals, human and livestock wastes-and headed
downstream. - The Pamlico Sound has been so overwhelmed with
extra nutrients and toxins that some scientists
fear an oxygen-deprived dead zone will develop,
stifling fish that come from Long Island to
Florida to lay eggs there.
5Did you read about that?
- Didnt happen
- Speculation earlier rains (Hurricane Dennis)
had already changed the ecosystem. - Speculation - cooler weather let oxygen levels
recover more quickly - While the catch in the rivers and estuaries was
virtually nil, they caught white shrimp in droves
just behind the boundary line where the runoff
waters ended and the saltwater began. - Hordes of shrimp were schooling just on the
seaward side of the line, but staying in close to
the boundary, making them an easy catch.
The boundary between the outflowing rivers and
ocean water was unusually sharp. Fisherman
profited because shrimp, pushed out of the
estuaries by runoff, clustered along the ocean
side of the boundary. (Image courtesy Neuse River
Estuary Modeling and Montoring)
6Is this Pollution?
7Definition Pollutant
- In general terms, any factor that has a harmful
effect on living things or their environment.
Bodkin Keller, 2003 - Particular chemical or form of energy that can
adversely affect the health, survival, or
activities of humans or other living organisms.
G. T. Miller, 2003
8Pollution
- A relative term in part, depends on the degree
and nature - From human or natural sources
- If from human source degrades the environment
(biotic or physical) - If from natural source degrades the biotic
environment in an episodic or non-successional
way
9Water Pollution
- Point sources
- Discharge pollutants at specific locations such
as pipes, ditches or sewers, sewage treatment
plants, oil tankers. - Relatively easy to clean
- Non-point sources
- Discharge pollutants from large land areas or
airsheds that pollute by runoff, from, e.g.,
croplands, golfcourses, parking lots, roads,
feedlots, or directly from atmosphere as rain or
dry deposition (e.g., ash) - Remaining major problem
10How do you assess water quality?
BAD
BETTER
- Image from Merritts et al., 1998
11How Do You Assess Your Own Health?
- Temperature
- Bleeding
- Pain
- Spots
- These are indicators
12How Healthy is the Water in a Natural System?
- Measuring Water Quality Factors and Understanding
Their Significance
13Water Quality ParametersTemperature
- Effects of Water Temperature
- Solubility of dissolved oxygen
- Rate of plant growth/photosynthesis
- Metabolic rate of organisms
- Sensitivity of organisms to toxic wastes,
parasites, and diseases - Temperature affects the rate of biological and
chemical processes occurring in the body of
water!
14We can measure environmental Water Quality
indicators
- Temperature
- pH
- Dissolved oxygen (DO)
- Biological oxygen demand (BOD)
- Nitrate - Nutrient
- Phosphates -Nutrient
- Turbidity
- Fecal coliform
- Total solids
- Alkalinity
- Ammonium
- Total dissolved solids (TDS)
- Hardness
15Water Quality ParametersTemperature
- What factors affect water temperature?
- Air temperature
- Amount of shade
- Soil erosion increasing turbidity
- Thermal pollution from human activities
- Confluence of streams
16- Table from http//www.epa.gov/volunteer/stream/vm
s53.html
17Water Quality ParameterspH
- Simple view of pH
- How acidic or basic a solution is
- Relative concentrations of H and OH-
determine pH value of water - If water sample has more H ions than OH- ions,
then acidic - If more OH- ions than H ions, then basic
- If H OH-, then neutral
18Water Quality ParameterspH
- Neutral water has pH of 7
- pH scale
- 0 to 14
- Acidic samples pH lt 7
- Basic samples pH gt 7
- Neutral samples pH 7
Image from http//ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/phdiagram
.html
19pH Ranges that Support Aquatic Life
20Dissolved Oxygen
- This fish needs oxygen to breath
Image from http//www.msstate.edu/dept/bioscience
s/fish.jpg
21Dissolved Oxygen
- Measured in mg/L and saturation
- DO levels fluctuate seasonally and over a 24-hour
period. - They vary with water temperature and altitude.
Cold water holds more oxygen than warm water - Water holds less oxygen at higher altitudes.
Information from http//www.epa.gov/volunteer/str
eam/vms52.html
Graph from http//condor.wesleyan.edu/soconnell/c
triver
22Dissolved Oxygen
- Thermal discharges, such as water used to cool
machinery in a manufacturing plant or a power
plant, raise the temperature of water and lower
its oxygen content. Aquatic animals are most
vulnerable to lowered DO levels in the early
morning on hot summer days when stream flows are
low, water temperatures are high, and aquatic
plants have not been producing oxygen since
sunset.
Information from http//www.epa.gov/volunteer/str
eam/vms52.html
Graph from http//condor.wesleyan.edu/soconnell/c
triver
23Dissolved Oxygen Terms
- lt 3 mg/L of DO hypoxia unhealthy, die offs
- No oxygen anoxia good for oil formation,
deadly for organisms
http//www.longislandsoundstudy.net/publications.h
tmmaps
24What is biochemical oxygen demand and why is it
important?
- Biochemical oxygen demand, or BOD, measures the
amount of oxygen consumed by microorganisms in
decomposing organic matter in stream water. BOD
also measures the chemical oxidation of inorganic
matter (i.e., the extraction of oxygen from water
via chemical reaction). A test is used to measure
the amount of oxygen consumed by these organisms
during a specified period of time (usually 5 days
at 20 C). The rate of oxygen consumption in a
stream is affected by a number of variables
temperature, pH, the presence of certain kinds of
microorganisms, and the type of organic and
inorganic material in the water.
25What is biochemical oxygen demand and why is it
important?
- BOD directly affects the amount of dissolved
oxygen in rivers and streams. The greater the
BOD, the more rapidly oxygen is depleted in the
stream. This means less oxygen is available to
higher forms of aquatic life. The consequences of
high BOD are the same as those for low dissolved
oxygen aquatic organisms become stressed,
suffocate, and die. - Sources of BOD include leaves and woody debris
dead plants and animals animal manure effluents
from pulp and paper mills, wastewater treatment
plants, feedlots, and food-processing plants
failing septic systems and urban stormwater
runoff.
26Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone
- Eutrophication of the Gulf of Mexico
- Produces dead zone, especially for benthic
organisms, e.g., crabs, mollusks, flounders - West of the Mississippi River delta
- 5,000-7,000 sq. mi. size of New Jersey
- Due to B.O.D. of Mississippi River Water
27Pollution to Aquatic Ecosystems
28Nutrients Nitrate and Phosphate
- In most biological systems these are limiting
nutrients - When you get more of them, more plants grow, but
then they die - The aerobic bacteria that breakdown organic
matter need oxygen - Too much organic matter to break down all of
the oxygen is consumed by bacteria trying to
breakdown organisms - No oxygen
- organisms that require oxygen die
- Organisms that do not need oxygen (e.g. sulfur
reducing organisms) take over
Red Tide off off S. Africa http//earthobservatory
.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id77
73
29Long Island Sound Watershed
- Three levels of priority for managing nonpoint
sources of nitrogen. - Within Level 1, the highest priority sub-drainage
basins are shown in black and include all of the
portions of Westchester, Suffolk and Nassau
Counties and New York City that lie within the
sound's drainage area and the densely populated
portions of Fairfield and New Haven Counties.
Image from http//www.longislandsoundstudy.net/cc
mp/priority.htm
30http//www.longislandsoundstudy.net/pubs/maps/nloa
ds.html
31Long Island Sound Problems
- Over a billion gallons of treated effluent, which
contains oxygen-demanding material and the
nutrient nitrogen, are discharged each day from
sewage treatment plants to the Sound. The
nitrogen overfertilizes the Sound, fueling the
growth of marine plants. When the plants die,
they sink to the bottom and decay, using up
oxygen in the process. Other sources of nitrogen
include runoff from overfertilized lawns and
gardens and atmospheric deposition from vehicle
and power plant emissions. - Toxic chemical substances produced through human
activity have found their way into the Sound and
persist in elevated levels in some bottom
sediments. In the past, much of this material
came from industrial sources, but rigorous
compliance with pollution control programs has
reduced this source substantially. Continuing
sources today include urban runoff, sewage
treatment plants, vehicle exhaust emissions,
household chemicals, and pesticides. These
contaminants affect the health of plants and
animals and human consumption of species that
concentrate these substances can pose significant
health risks.
32Long Island Sound Problems
- Pathogens, disease-causing, microscopic bacteria
and viruses, enter the Sound's waters through
inadequately treated human sewage and domestic
and wild animal wastes. Some of the primary
sources of pathogens are older sewer systems that
have combined stormwater and sanitary systems
that overflow during rainfalls (called combined
sewer overflows), sewage treatment plant
malfunctions, illegal connections to storm
sewers, and vessel sewage discharges. - Floatable debris comes from people carelessly
disposing of their trash, transforming it into
litter that enters the Sound through runoff,
stormwater discharges, and combined sewer
overflows.
33We can measure environmental Water Quality
indicators
- Temperature
- pH
- Dissolved oxygen (DO)
- Biological oxygen demand (BOD)
- Nitrate - Nutrient
- Phosphates -Nutrient
- Turbidity
- Fecal coliform
- Total solids
- Alkalinity
- Ammonium
- Total dissolved solids (TDS)
- Hardness
34Turbidity- What is turbidity why is it
important?
- Turbidity is a measure of water clarity how much
the material suspended in water decreases the
passage of light through the water. Suspended
materials include soil particles (clay, silt, and
sand), algae, plankton, microbes, and other
substances. These materials are typically in the
size range of 0.004 mm (clay) to 1.0 mm (sand).
Turbidity can affect the color of the water.
Image http//earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Floy
dIntr datao/ Data http//www.epa.gov/volunteer/st
ream/vms55.html
35Turbidity- What is turbidity why is it
important?
- Higher turbidity increases water temperatures
because suspended particles absorb more heat.
This, in turn, reduces the concentration of
dissolved oxygen (DO) because warm water holds
less DO than cold. - Higher turbidity also reduces the amount of
light penetrating the water, which reduces
photosynthesis and the production of DO. - Suspended materials can clog fish gills, reducing
resistance to disease in fish, lowering growth
rates, and affecting egg and larval development. - As the particles settle, they can blanket the
stream bottom, especially in slower waters, and
smother fish eggs and benthic macroinvertebrates.
Image http//earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Floy
dIntr datao/ Data http//www.epa.gov/volunteer/st
ream/vms55.html
36Turbidity- What is turbidity why is it
important?
- Sources of turbidity include
- Soil erosion
- Waste discharge
- Urban runoff
- Eroding stream banks
- Large numbers of bottom feeders (such as carp),
which stir up bottom sediments - Excessive algal growth.
Image http//earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Floy
dIntr datao/ Data http//www.epa.gov/volunteer/st
ream/vms55.html
37Fecal Coliform
- Organism itself may not be bad (different
varieties). - But is an indication of other orgainisms that may
be lucking in the water. - In your LOE reading what else could be used in a
similar way? - Values given as /100 mL of water
- Drinking water 0 mL WHO
- Government regulations for fresh water
- Escherichia coli lt 26/ 100 mL
- Enterococci lt 33/100 mL
Image from http//oh.water.usgs.gov/micro/MIfluor
escence.jpg
38Preserving Water Quality
- Depends upon protecting Watersheds
- What can be done?
- EPA watershed site http//www.epa.gov/owow/waters
hed/ - Center for Watershed Protection
http//www.cwp.org/
http//www.adopt-a-watershed.org/