Title: Freshwater Resources
1Freshwater Resources
2Freshwater
- Water that is relatively pure, with very few
dissolved salts - Freshwater occurs in
- Lakes, rivers, streams, groundwater, glaciers,
rainwater, soil, water vapor in the atmosphere - (In contrast, ocean water is salty because salts
from land run into it and stay there as surface
water evaporates.)
3Freshwater
- Only 2.5 of the planets water is freshwater.
- And only 1 of that exists on Earths surface.
- Only 1 part in 10,000 of water is easily
accessible for drinking and irrigation.
4Where is the Freshwater?
- Rivers and streams
- Wetlands
- Lakes and Ponds
- Groundwater
5Groundwater
- Water beneath Earths surface that did not
evaporate, flow into rivers, or get taken up by
organisms - Groundwater is contained in aquifers, porous
spongelike layers of rock, sand, or gravel. - Water table boundary between the upper zone of
aeration and the lower zone of saturation
6Aquifers
- Confined or artesian aquifer water under
pressure, trapped within impermeable layers
(often clay) - Unconfined aquifer water under less pressure
no overlying impermeable layer - Aquifer recharge zone geographic area where
water infiltrates soil and recharges aquifer
7Groundwater and aquifers
8Freshwater distribution
- Global freshwater distribution is very uneven.
- Rainfall varies from nearly zero up to 1,200
centimeters (470 inches)/year. - Canada has 20 times as much water per citizen as
does China.
9Available freshwater resources
- Nations vary by more than a factor of 100 inches
of water per capita.
10Available freshwater resources
- Asia has lots of water but very little water per
capita. - Australia has lots of water per capita but little
water overall.
11Water Use
- Consumptive use water is removed from an
aquifer or surface body, and not returned (e.g.,
most agricultural, industrial, and residential
use) - Nonconsumptive use removal of water is only
temporary (e.g., passing water through a
hydroelectric dam)
12Biggest Issue is Depletion and Pollution of
Freshwater
13Solutions for depletion Desalination
- Desalination or desalinization removal of salt
from seawater to create freshwater - Perfecting this technology would mean the oceans
could provide us with unlimited freshwater. - But so far, it is expensive!
- Most of the worlds 7,500 desalination plants are
in wealthy oil states of the Middle East, where
water is scarce enough to make desalination
economically feasible.
14Solutions for depletion Reducing demand
- In AGRICULTURE
- Use high-efficiency irrigation techniques
- Line irrigation canals to prevent leaks
- Level fields to reduce runoff
- Choose crops appropriate to climate
- Eliminate government subsidies of inappropriate
crops and methods - New GM crops?
15Solutions for depletion Reducing demand
- In the INDUSTRIAL and MUNICIPAL sectors
- Shift to processes that save water (and thus
money) - Invest in repairing pipe leaks
- Recycle gray wastewater
16Solutions for depletion Reducing demand
- In the RESIDENTIAL sector (what YOU can do)
- Install low-flow faucets and appliances
- Use automatic dishwashers
- Replace lawns with native vegetation
- If you keep lawns, water them at night
- Recycle gray wastewater
17Solutions for depletion Economic approaches
- Market-based strategies
- End government subsidies of inefficient practices
- Make water a commodity whose price reflects its
costs - Privatize water supplies
- Decentralize control over water
- Many of these strategies risk increasing the gap
between rich and poor
18Freshwater pollution
- Over half of the worlds major rivers are
seriously depleted and polluted, degrading and
poisoning the surrounding ecosystems, threatening
the health and livelihood of people who depend on
them. - World Commission on Water, 1999
- Groundwater pollution is extensive but invisible,
a covert crisis.
19Water pollution point and non-point sources
20Urban Runoff organic waste is largest single
pollutant
21Types of pollution Eutrophication
- Excess runoff of nutrients like nitrogen and
phosphorus leads to blooms of algae or
phytoplankton - and then microbial decay that sucks oxygen from
the water - (e.g., the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico)
22Eutrophication
Oligotrophic water body Low-nutrient high-
oxygen conditions
Eutrophic water body High-nutrient, low-oxygen
conditions
23Types of pollution Pathogens
- Waterborne disease from viruses, bacteria, etc.,
contributes to 5 million deaths per year. - In 2002, 1.1 billion people were still without
safe water supplies. - 2.4 billion people had no sewer or sanitation
facilities. - 4/5 of people without sanitation lived in rural
areas.
24Types of pollution Toxic chemicals
- Many thousands of chemicals we manufacture find
their way into our water, where some have toxic
effects. - Pesticides
- Petroleum products
- Arsenic, lead, mercury, other metals
- Acids from mining runoff and acid precipitation
25Types of pollution Sediment
- Erosion of soil from mining, clear-cutting, real
estate development, and farming puts sediment
into waterways. - There it alters conditions and can kill organisms.
26Types of pollution Heat and cold
- Yes, even heat and cold can pollute!
- Organisms not adapted to the new temperature
conditions can suffer or die. - Warm water from power plants decreases
dissolved oxygen. - Clearing streamside vegetation also warms
water. - Cold water is released below dams, harming
native fish.
27Indicators of water quality
- Scientists use biological properties to measure
water quality - Presence of pathogens disease-causing
organisms may be present, making water risky for
drinking
28Indicators of water quality
- Scientists use chemical properties to measure
water quality - Nutrient concentrations
- pH waters acidity or alkalinity
- Taste and odor can show presence of certain
chemical contaminants - Hardness hard water has high concentrations of
salts - Dissolved oxygen content indicates suitability
for life high D.O. generally good for organisms
29Indicators of water quality
- Scientists use physical properties to measure
water quality - Turbidity density of suspended particles
water with sediments from erosion is turbid - Color indicates tannins and other chemicals
- Temperature aquatic organisms sensitive to
temperature warm water holds less dissolved
oxygen
30Groundwater pollution
- Worse than surface water pollution, because it is
longer lasting - (e.g., persistent toxicants get washed out of
rivers, but remain in groundwater until they
break down.)
31Groundwater pollution
- Sources are both natural and anthropogenic.
- NATURAL SOURCES
- Arsenic
- Aluminum
- Fluoride
- Nitrates
- Sulfates
- HUMAN SOURCES
- Leaky underground storage tanks (oil, gas,
industrial chemicals, septic waste) - Nitrates from fertilizers
- Pesticides
- Pathogens from wells and feedlots
- Contamination from underground hazardous waste
disposal - Industrial chemical waste
- Compounds from military sites
32Sources of groundwater contamination
33Pollution prevention
- Drinking water is treated before it reaches your
tap. - But it is easier and more cost effective to
prevent pollution than to mitigate it once it
occurs.
34What is waste water treatment?
- Municipal and industrial sewage
- Water has been changed because of addition of
suspended solids, salts, nutrients, bacteria, or
other oxygen-demanding material
35What is BOD?
- Biological Oxygen Demand the amount of oxygen
needed by bacteria to decompose the organic
material in the water - Indirectly, is a measure of organic matter in
water - The higher the BOD, the more organic matter in
the water
36Waste Water Treatment in Rural Areas
- Septic Tanks
- Problems
- Septic tank is full of solids so bacteria cant
work (needs to be emptied) - Leach lines dont release water due to
- Soil compacted, or impermeable, or tree roots
have clogged the lines
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39Waste Water Treatment in Cities
- Centralized Municipal Treatment Plant
- There are 3 steps in the process
40Primary Treatment
- Removes 30 to 40 of the suspended solids and
organic matter - Screens remove large pieces of floating organic
matter - Grit chambers where sand small stones are
removed - Sedimentation tank where smaller particles can
settle out, forming a sludge. The sludge is
combed out and transported elsewhere
41Secondary Treatment
- The waster water from the primary treatment goes
into an aeration tank. Sometimes called
activated sludge tank. Air may be pumped in.
Aerobic bacteria consume organic material - The wastewater than goes into the final
sedimentation tank - Waste water is disinfected with chlorine gas
- Water is released into lake, river, ocean or
recycled
42Advanced Waste Water Treatment
- If the water coming out of the Secondary
Treatment process still contains pollutants, then
another level of treatment is required - Nitrates are removed by charcoal filters
- Heavy metals are removed by sand and grit filters
- Disinfected with chlorine or UV light
43What to do with the treated waste water?
- Discharge in river or ocean
- Use it for irrigating crops, landscape, golf
courses - Settling ponds to recharge aquifers
44What to do with the sludge?
- Further decomposition with bacteria also produces
methane which can be use as fuel source - Recycle sludge and use to seed in primary
treatment - Dry sludge and put in landfill or burn
45What to do with storm drain water?
- Mostly remains untreated and just flows into the
ocean. Contains oil, metals, pesticides, home
fertilizers, detergents
46Natural sites of Water Treatment
- Wetlands, marshes serve as natural areas of
treatment
47- Virtual Water Treatment Plant Tour