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WHAT IS THE VALUE OF WATER?

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... Constructing artificial wetlands However this will take decades for area to improve and this will not prevent Aral Sea from shrinking into a few brine lakes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WHAT IS THE VALUE OF WATER?


1
WHAT IS THE VALUE OF WATER?
2
FACTS ABOUT WATER
  • What percent of the planet is water?
  • How much is fresh water?
  • Where is most of the fresh water?
  • 25 of the worlds drinking water comes from this
    lake.
  • How many oceans are there?
  • What are the names of the oceans?
  • What percent of your body is water?
  • 75
  • 3
  • Icebergs
  • Great Lakes
  • One
  • Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, Antarctic
  • 70

3
Earth/ \
  • 25 Land 75 water
  • / \
  • 97 salt
    3 fresh

  • / \

  • oceans 2 glaciers 1 drinkable
  • /
    \
  • coastal (10)
    open sea (90)
  • Contains 90 of all marine
    species
  • / \
  • coastal wetlands estuaries
    coral reefs

4
OCEANS OF OUR PLANET
5
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6
What impact have humans had on marine ecosystems?
  • 1,200 marine species have become extinct in past
    100 years
  • Up to ½ all known fish species are threatened
    with extinction due to
  • Overfishing
  • Habitat destruction
  • Pollution
  • ½ wetlands are gone (agriculture/development)
  • 27 of worlds coral reefs are gone or seriously
    threatened
  • 70 could be gone within next 50 years
  • 70 beaches eroded due to development and rising
    sea levels

7
What services do marine ecosystems provide us
with?
  • Ecological
  • Climate moderation
  • CO2 absorption
  • Nutrient cycling
  • Water treatment
  • Reduced storm impact (wetlands)
  • Habitat
  • biodiversity
  • Economic
  • Food
  • Medicine (coral reefs)
  • Transportation
  • Habitat for humans (coastal)
  • Employment
  • Oil/gas
  • minerals

8
WHAT ARE HYDROTHERMAL VENTS?
9
What Is The Water Cycle?
10
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11
What is a Riparian Zone?
RIPARIAN ZONE
RIPARIAN ZONE
12
Why is a riparian zone important to aquatic
ecosystem?
  • Riparian zones are narrow strips of land
    bordering lakes, rivers, and other bodies of
    water
  • Riparian zones are important for several reasons
  • Biodiversity mammals, fish, amphibians, insects,
    plants liking moisture
  • Water quality traps fertilizers, pesticides,
    heavy metals, pathogens
  • Protection against erosion traps sediments (1
    pollutant in rivers)
  • Temperature regulation Riparian plants shield
    water from sun (thermal pollution)
  • Property value beautiful scenery, prevents loss
    of land, and provides privacy

13
What services do freshwater aquatic ecosystems
provide us with?
  • Environmental
  • Climate moderation
  • Nutrient cycling
  • Waste treatment
  • Flood control
  • Groundwater recharge
  • Habitat
  • biodiversity
  • Economic
  • Food
  • Drinking water
  • Irrigation for crops
  • Hydroelectricity
  • Transportation
  • Recreation
  • employment

14
What is a Watershed?
  • The simple definitionIt's the area of land that
    catches rain and snow and drains or seeps into a
    marsh, stream, river, lake or groundwater.

15
What are Topographic Maps?
  • Topographic maps show a 3 dimensional world in 2
    dimensions by using contour lines.
  • Contour lines are curves that connect contiguous
    points of the same altitude

16
How do we determine Contour Intervals?
  • The contour interval measurement is the vertical
    distance between adjacent contour lines
  • What is the contour interval on this map?
  • Determine the altitude of points a, b, c.

17
What are Hachures?
  • If a loop instead represents a depression, some
    maps note this by short lines radiating from the
    inside of the loop, called "hachures".

18
What do the Colors Represent?
  • ColorsThe colors on a topographic map are
    symbolic of different map features.
  • Blue water
  • Green forest
  • Brown contour lines
  • Black cultural features (buildings, place
    names, boundary lines, roads, etc.)
  • Red principal roads
  • Pink urban areas
  • Purple revisions to an older map, compiled from
    aerial photos. If an area has become urbanized,
    this may be shown as purple shading on the new,
    revised map.

19
Where does most of our drinking water come from?
  • An aquifer is an underground layer of
    water-bearing permeable rock or unconsolidated
    materials (gravel, sand, silt, or clay) from
    which groundwater can be usefully extracted using
    a water well

20
Where Does All The Water Go?
  • Municipal/Residential 7
  • Industrial 21
  • Paper/pulp 10
  • Wood/Lumber 6
  • Mining/oil/gas 3
  • Other 2
  • Agricultural 72

21
Residential Use Of Water
  • Lawns 29
  • Toilet 29
  • Bathing 23
  • Laundry 11
  • Dishes 6
  • Drinking 2

22
Can we learn from our mistakes?
  • Aral Sea Crisis
  • Location Russia
  • Diversion of water to irrigate cotton fields,
    vegetable, fruit and rice crops has caused
  • Tripling of seas salinity
  • Decreasing the seas surface area by 54 and
    volume by 75
  • Converting the lake bottom to a human-made desert
  • Devastated the fishing industry (extinction of 20
    out of 24 fish species)
  • Alteration of climate
  • Health problems such as throat cancer from toxic
    dust

23
Can the Aral Sea be Saved?
  • Already 600 million has been invested in
  • Purifying drinking water
  • Improving irrigation techniques
  • Constructing artificial wetlands
  • However this will take decades for area to
    improve and this will not prevent Aral Sea from
    shrinking into a few brine lakes

24
The shrinking Ogallala Aquifer
  • The worlds largest aquifer (size of lake Huron)
    is a nonrenewable resource produced by the last
    ice age (15,000-30,000years ago) with an
    extremely slow recharge area due to the clay
    content in the soil.
  • It is being depleted much faster than it is able
    to recharge.
  • At this rate ¼ of the remaining aquifer will
    disappear by 2020.

25
What can be done?
  • Use more efficient irrigation systems
  • Gravity flow
  • Center pivot
  • Drip irrigation (best)
  • Switch to crops that need less water
  • Irrigate less land
  • Citizens can conserve water

26
Three Gorges Project
  • Largest dam project in the world (China) costing
    26 billion
  • One mile long and 575 ft above Yangtze River
  • Reservoir 350 miles upstream
  • Scheduled to be completed in 2011
  • 32 turbines, 22,500 megawatts
  • Displace 2 million people

27
How Does Building Dams Affect The Environment?
  • Destroys habitats
  • Displaces people
  • Causes droughts in other regions
  • Extremely dangerous if fails
  • Provides clean power
  • Controls flooding down river
  • Provides water

28
What are Sources of Pollution?
  • The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
    defines point source pollution as any single
    identifiable source of pollution from which
    pollutants are discharged, such as a pipe, ditch,
    ship or factory smokestack

29
To drill or not to drill, that is the question?
  • Oil spills
  • Exxon Valdez (1989) in Alaska
  • Amount spilled estimated 32 million gallons
  • Double hulled ships to carry oil

30
  • Bp Deepwater Horizon Spill in Gulf (2010)
  • Amount spilled
  • Some Numbers to think about!
  • 27 offshore drilling projects approved in Gulf
    after BP spill
  • 11 billion gallons of oil spilled each year into
    oceans
  • 19.5 million barrels of oil used in US per day
  • 1.6 billion as of June 2010 used to clean up oil
    spill

31
How can we clean up oil spills?
  • Mechanical
  • Floating booms to contain oil
  • Skimmer boats to vacuum
  • Absorbant pads (feathers and hair to clean up)
  • Chemical
  • Coagulating agents to cause oil to clump for
    easier pick up or sink to bottom
  • Dispersing agents to break oil apart
  • Fire (but crude oil is harder to burn than
    refined oil and contributes to air pollution

32
What is Nonpoint Source Pollution?
  • Nonpoint-source pollution is another term for
    polluted runoff.  Water washing over the land,
    whether from precipitation, car washing or
    watering crops or lawns, picks up an array of
    contaminants including oil, sand and salt from
    roadways, agricultural chemicals, and nutrients
    and toxic materials from both urban and rural
    areas. 

33
How Can We Clean Up?
  • Most environmental projects sooner or later will
    arrive at the remediation or clean-up stage of
    the project.
  • Three forms of cleanup Physical, Biological,
    Chemical

34
What is The Clean Water Act of 1972?
  • Its goal is to restore and maintain the
    chemical, physical, and biological integrity of
    the nations waters
  • All water must be fishable and swimmable
  • Requires discharge permits of major polluters
  • Identify toxins and use best practical methods to
    remove pollutants
  • Set goal for best available technology to be
    developed in the future

35
How Can We Control Water Pollution?
  • Reduce NOx and sulfur emissions
  • Modify agricultural practices
  • Separate storm water runoff and septic treatment
  • Decrease silt runoff ( 1 polluter holding ponds
    and permeable surfaces)
  • Seal Landfills
  • Stop Ocean Dumping
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