Title: Water Pollution Chapter 19
1Water PollutionChapter 19
2Types and Effects
- Water pollution any chemical, biological or
physical change in water quality that has a
harmful effect on living organisms or makes water
unsuitable for use. - Table 19-1 Major Categories of Water Pollutants
3How do we measure Water Quality?
- 1) Measure number of coliform bacteria present in
100-mL sample - WHO recommends 0 colonies/100mL drinking
- EPA max level of swimming 200 colonies/100mL
- 2) Measure oxygen demanding waste
- Determined by measuring biological oxygen demand
(BOD) the amount of dissolved O needed by
decomposers to breakdown waste
4Sources
- Nonpoint cant be traced to any single site of
discharge - Acid deposit, runoff of chemicals, pesticides,
fertilizer/manure - Point source discharge at specific locations
- Factories, sewage treatment, mines, oil tankers
- Easy to identify, monitor and regulate
5Pollution of Freshwater Streams
- Can recover rapidly from degradable,
oxygen-demanding wastes and excess heat through
dilution and bacterial decay - These processes do not eliminate nonbiodegradable
or slowly degradable - The time and distance needed to recover depend on
volume of waste, streams volume, flow rate,
temp., and pH level.
6Cuyahoga River, Ohio 1959/69
7Pollution of Freshwater Lakes
- Dilution of pollutants in lakes, reservoirs and
ponds less effective - Contain stratified layers with little vertical
mixing - Little free flow
- Ponds have small volumes of water
- More vulnerable to contamination by plant
nutrients, oil, pesticides, toxic substances
8Eutrophication
- Lakes receive inputs of nutrients and silt eroded
and running off from surroundings - Eutrophication natural nutrient enrichment of
lakes - Near urban or agricultural areas, human
activities accelerate input of plant nutrients - Results in cultural eutrophication
- Caused mostly by nitrate and phosphate containing
effluents
9Groundwater Pollution
- More of a problem because numerous sources as we
dump wastes into storage lagoons, septic tanks,
landfills, hazardous dumps and deep injection
wells. - Human health risks from contaminants
- petrochemicals (gas, oil)
- organic solvents (TCE)
- pesticides and arsenic
- lead (Pb) and fluoride (F-)
10Protecting Groundwater
- Contaminated aquifers almost impossible to clean
up because of large volume, inaccessibility, and
slow movement - Preventing contamination only effective method
- Monitor aquifer near landfills and tanks
- Leak detection systems on underground tanks
- Banning/ strictly regulating hazardous waste
1119.5 Oceans and pollution
12Clean Water Act (1972)
- 1) Make all waters fishable and swimmable
- 2) Require discharge permits of major polluters
- 3) Identify toxic pollutants and require use of
best practices technology (BPT)
1319-5 Ocean Pollution
- Oceans can dilute, disperse, and degrade large
amounts of raw sewage, sludge, oil and some
degradable industrial waste. - Pro dumping sludge and hazardous waste into deep
ocean because some organisms are more resilient
in the ocean. - Con Feel it would delay pollution prevention and
promote further degradation of this vital system.
14Coastal Areas
- Include wetlands, estuaries, coral reefs and
mangrove swamps - Sustain most of the damage of waste inputs
- Most coastal developing countries dump sewage
into the sea without treatment - 85 of sewage from cities along Mediterranean Sea
is discharged untreated
15Harmful Alga Blooms
- Runoff of sewage and agricultural wastes into
coastal waters introduce large quantities of
nitrates (NO3-) and phosphate (PO43-) plant
nutrients that cause explosive growth of algae. - The harmful alga blooms (HAB) are called red,
brown, or green tides depending on their color. - HABs can release toxins that damage fisheries,
kill fish-eating birds, reduce tourism and poison
seafood.
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17- Death of the HABs deplete dissolved oxygen and
cause the death of marine species. - These oxygen-depleted zones form in coastal
waters b/c of excessive nonpoint inputs of
fertilizers and animal wastes from land runoff
and deposition of nitrogen from the atmosphere. - In these zones, aquatic life dies or moves
elsewhere - Biggest zone in U.S. waters forms every summer in
Gulf of Mexico near Louisiana and Mississippi
River Basin (Figure 19-13).
18What pollutants do we dump into the Ocean?
- Barges and ships still legally dump large
quantities of dredge spoils (materials containing
toxic metals scraped from bottom of harbors and
rivers to maintain shipping channels) into
Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf coast - Many countries dump sewage sludge gooey mixture
of toxic chemicals, infectious agents, solids
from wastewater treatment plants - 1992 U.S. banned this practice
19Oil Effects on Animals
- Depend on type of oil, amount released, distance
from shore, time of year, weather, water
temperature and currents. - Volatile hydrocarbons immediately kill organisms,
some others form globules that float on surface
and coat feathers of birds. - This oil coating destroys the natural insulation
and buoyancy, causing many to drown or die from
loss of body heat - Most life forms recover from crude oil within 3
years, but refined oil recovery up to 10 years
20Oil Effects on Oceans
- Tanker accidents or offshore drilling blowouts
get publicity but are not the main source of oil
pollution. - Largest input of oil is released into the ocean
during normal operation of offshore wells,
washing tankers and releasing oily water and from
pipeline and storage tank leaks. - Almost half of oil in the ocean is waste oil
dumped, spilled or leaked into sewers by cities,
industries or at-home oil changes.
21Clean Up Oil Spills
- Prevention still best method
- Others remove only part of the oil
- None work well on large spill
- Chemical methods
- Coagulating agents to cause oil to clump or sink
- Dispersing agents to break up oil slicks
- Mechanical methods
- Floating blooms to contain the oil spill or keep
it from moving - Skimmer boats to vacuum up oil
- Absorbent pads or mesh pillows to soak up oil
22Bioremediation
- Biological method of cleanup
- May involve constructing wetlands or involving
plants to soak up organic nutrients - Ex Exxon Valdez oil spill
- Using bacteria to digest the oil coating
- More effective than artificial methods
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2419-7 Drinking Water Quality
- If no access to clean water, it is taken from
- Shallow groundwater easily contaminated
- Nearby polluted river water
- Mudholes used by animals and humans
- Purification developing countries with no
treatment systems - Tropical regions expose water to the sun
- Bangladesh cloth to strain water
- PUR packet powdered mixture that removes
pathogenic microorganisms and suspended matter
25- U.S. Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974
- Requires EPA to establish national drinking water
standards called maximum contaminant levels - Privately owned wells not required to meet
standards - Opposition Congress pressured by
water-polluting industries to weaken Act - Eliminate national water tests
- No media access of health violations
- Allow states to violate the act if they cannot
afford to comply - Eliminate water systems use of technology to
remove cancer causing agents
2619.6Preventing/Reducing Surface Water pollution
27Preventing/Reducing Surface Water Pollution
- Clean Up of Nonpoint Pollution
- Reducing and controlling runoff
- Preserve wetlands to allow nitrate and phosphate
to flow through and be absorbed - Clean Up of Point Source Pollution
- Legal Approach (Basis of efforts to control
pollution) - Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972
(renamed Clean Water Act when amended in 1977) - 1987 Water Quality Act
- Technological Approach
28Technological Approach to Point source Pollution
- Septic Tanks sewage from each house goes into
holding tank on property - (25 of all homes)
- Sewer lines urban areas waste flow through
series of pipes leading to treatment center - Some cities have separate lines for sewage and
storm water some combined lines so if rains
flood system, often discharges untreated sewage
into surface water
29Sewage Reaches Treatment Plant
- Preliminary large objects screened
- Primary Treatment (mechanical process)
- Removes 60 of the suspended solids and 30 of
oxygen demanding wastes from sewage - Grease and oils removed, organic solids sent to
Biosolids treatment - Uses screens to filter out debris such as sticks,
stones and rags - Allow suspended solids to settle out as sludge in
settling tank
30- 2) Secondary Treatment (biological process)
- Aeration process (add oxygen)
- 1) Aerobic bacteria remove 90 of biodegradable,
oxygen-demanding organic waste still left over - Activated sludge process pump sewage into large
tank and mix for several hours with bacteria-rich
sludge and air bubbles - Then goes to sedimentation tank where
microorganisms and suspended solids settle out as
sludge
31- Sludge produced is incinerated, sent to landfill
or treated in biosolids facility - Secondary removes only tiny fraction of
radioactive isotopes and persistent organic
substances such as pesticides
32- 3) Advanced Sewage Treatment
- Water travel through anthracite coal filters that
remove specific pollutants left in water after
primary and secondary - Sometimes not used because cost twice as much to
build and four times as much to operate as
secondary plants - Growing interest in using membrane based
technologies reverse osmosis, micro filtration,
ultra filtration and nanofiltration
33- Because of Clean Water Act, most U.S. cities have
combined primary and secondary sewage treatment
plants - Figure 19-17
- Before discharge, water from all three processes
undergo - 1) bleaching to remove water coloration
- 2) disinfection to kill disease-carrying bacteria
(chlorination)
34Treating Sewage by working with Nature
- Sewage Walls
- Run along residential block
- Channels sewage through terraced planters that
progressively filter and purify the waste - Living machines
- Look like aquatic botanical gardens, powered by
sun - Wastewater garden (Figure 19-19)
- Small, low tech artificial wetland to treat
sewage - Water flowing out can be used to irrigate gardens
or fields or flush toilets
35The Living Machine