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ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

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ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES Coral reef pollution LA River trash recovery Plastic pollution Box 11.2 p 339 plastic is the only substance that can not be dumped in the ocean ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES


1
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
2
US Exclusive Economic zone
  • Written into law in March 1983
  • Extends 200 miles out to sea
  • Foreign vessels must be invited to fish there

3
US Exclusive Economic zone
  • Fig 11.1 p 315 map in book

4
Food chain disruption
  • Remember the food chains Fig 13.20 p 394
  • Today there is a decrease in the Stellar sea lion
    populations in the Gulf of Alaska
  • Stellar sea lions eat Pollock
  • Pollock is a great tasting fish, so we eat it
  • Therefore Pollock is over fished

5
Endangered SpeciesSource NOAA
  • ESA Listing Rule - Endangered Status for Western
    population62 FR 2434505/05/1997ESA Listing Rule -
    Threatened Status55 FR 4920411/26/1990Critical
    Habitat Designation58 FR 4526908/27/1993Protection
    Measures for the Groundfish Fisheries Off
    Alaska68 FR 20401/02/2003Recovery
    Plann/a12/1992Draft Revised Recovery
    Plan71 FR 2991905/24/2006

6
  • http//www.fws.gov/endangered/laws-policies/

7
Steller Sea Lion
8
  • Bycatch fish caught in nets besides the target
    fish p 414 - 415
  • All fish caught inside our economic zone must be
    reported to the US government
  • Trawling Fig 13.26 p 398
  • http//youtu.be/9Uo-YpFHV70 play this video

9
Trawling
10
Trawl fishing
11
Pelagic Longline
12
Protecting our inland water ways
  • In coming ships
  • Ballast stowaways
  • Toxic spills
  • Destruction of fragile flora and fauna
  • There is a quit a bit of talk about the great
    lakes water way right now

13
Coastal wet lands
  • Under the federal Clean Water Act, states are
    required to have a method in place to protect wet
    lands (it may not actually work, but it must be
    in place)

14
Clean water act
  • 564 page document with several amendments.

15
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16
Mangroves
  • Remember what happened to the coasts and people
    of the islands during the tsunami of 2004
  • Salt marshes and mangroves Fig 11.13 p 325 Read p
    324 326
  • What else are mangroves good for?
  • Habitat for fish and shell fish larvae,
    juveniles, as well as adults

17
Pollution
  • What is pollution
  • Pages 326- 327

18
  • Chesapeake Bay

19
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20
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21
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?voILB2LwfKYo

22
Oil
  • There has been some really bad oil spills
  • Largest spill was in1991 during the first Gulf
    war
  • Oil spill in the Black Sea November 2007
  • BP deep ocean well blowout 2010
  • How much oil do you think we actually recover?
  • Only between 8 -15

23
Oil cont.
  • No. 2 fuel oil - A complex combination of
    hydrocarbons with carbon numbers in the range C9
    and higher produced from the distillation of
    petroleum crude oil.
  • This is often the stuff of which oil spills are
    made.
  • Fig 11.19 p 332 book

24
Oil cont.
25
Cleaning up Oil
  • Click on title

26
  • Dumping garbage into the Great Lakes is
    prohibited by law, but it continues under the
    very eyes of the Coast Guard.

27
Two points I want you to cover from the book
  • Osmosis the movement of water through a
    semipermiable membrane. Read this in your text.
    We saw this in marine animals.
  • Maintenance of body temperature, look at cold
    blooded vs. warm blooded

28
Double hulled ships
29
Radioactive waste
  • Click on Chernobyl incident
  • Run through the news stories
  • How do we get rid of this mess
  • Some suggest dumping it into the subduction
    zones.
  • Do you think that will work?

30
Radio active waste
31
Low oxygen levels Ch 11
  • Where do they occur ?
  • Gulf of Mexico, Black Sea, Red Sea
  • What causes them ?
  • Major cause is fertilizer in the water

32
Waste management
  • How can we make a difference?

33
Marine plastic pollution
  • There is a law against dumping plastic from ships
  • It is a danger to the marine animals Fig. 11.29
    p 338

34
Coral reef pollution
35
LA River trash recovery
36
Plastic pollution
  • Box 11.2 p 339
  • plastic is the only substance that can not be
    dumped in the ocean
  • Eastern Pacific Garbage Patch
  • Fig 11.30 p 340

37
Eastern Pacific Garbage Patch
38
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39
Birds eat plastics
40
Cape fur seal lying on rock, dead of suffocation
from a plastic wire wound around its neck, South
Africa.
41
Marine plastic pollution
42
Toxins
  • Heavy metals
  • any of a number of higher atomic weight elements,
    which has the properties of a metallic substance
    at room temperature, we are interested in those
    that are toxic to marine life, Cu, Hg, Bi, As,
    Al,
  • Concentrations of toxic waste is found
  • in sediments
  • In shellfish
  • how does this work? I went over this in class

43
Toxins
  • Minamata disease Hg
  • Fig 11.25 p 335

Children with Congenital Minamata Disease due to
intrauterine methylmercury poisoning. Photo
credit Harada 1986.
44
Hg p 336
45
The mad hatter
  • What was this like, what caused it? Why the
    name, mad hatter?

46
Toxins
  • Lead poisoning Government agencies estimated
    that it would cost 16.6 billion per year from
    2001 to 2010 to inspect and clean up lead paint
    hazards in houses that have not yet been cleaned
    up.
  • Do you think this has been completed?

47
Phytoremediation
  • Dept. Horticulture Science, HFSB 416, Texas AM
    University,College Station, Texas 77843-2133.

48
Phytoremediation
49
How PCBs are used today
  • Capacitors may contain PCBs, as well as
    fluorescent light ballasts, transformers, X-ray
    equipment and vacuum pumps, lubricating and
    cutting oils, and as additives in pesticides,
    paints, carbonless copy (NCR) paper, adhesives,
    sealants, plastics, reactive flame retardants,
    and as a fixative for microscopy.

50
PCBs and DDT
  • Polychlorinated biphenyls p 334 335
  • DDT
  • Greatest use in the early 1960
  • Are no longer made or used in the USA
  • Are still entering the environment
  • Remain in sediments for long time
  • Fig 11.24 p 335

51
Boston Harbor sewage effluent
52
  • Blue colors meet swimming standard, red-purple
    colors exceed swimming standard of 35
    colonies/100 ml.

53
  • In depositional areas, weak tidal currents or
    depressions in the seafloor allow solids to
    settle and become soft sediments. These areas are
    most affected by pollution because toxic
    materials and oxygen-consuming organic matter
    tend to adhere to solid particles and settle to
    the bottom with them.

54
Boston Harbor sewage project
  • Fig 11.23 p 334

55
New York Bight
  • Page 333 why was this discontinued?

56
Waste management
  • How can we make a difference?

57
When was the Federal Clean Water Act passed?
58
  • 1972

59
  • Good luck on your exams.
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