Title: WATER POLLUTION PART II
1WATER POLLUTION PART II
2POLLUTION FROM SEWAGE
- SEWAGE
- poses a threat to public health because it
carries disease-causing agents (cholera bacteria,
hepatitis, Eschericia coli (coliform bacteria). - Causes nutrient-loading (organically-rich) into
surface waters. - Causes an increase in BOD (biological oxygen
demand) or BOD5 over five day period, which
causes a decrease in
3POLLUTION FROM SEWAGE
- SEWAGE
- poses a threat to public health because it
carries disease-causing agents (cholera bacteria,
hepatitis, Eschericia coli (coliform bacteria). - Causes nutrient-loading (organically-rich) into
surface waters. - Causes an increase in BOD (biological oxygen
demand) or BOD5 over five day period, which
causes a decrease in DO. This results in the
lowering of photosynthesis and cellular
respiration.
4MONITORING SEWAGE
- Standard test for for total coliform (TCOL) and
fecal coliform (FCOL) bacteria. The number of
colonies formed are counted. - STANDARDS (EPA)
- Drinking Water 1 coliform bacteria100 mL of
water - Swimming Water 200 coliform bacteria 100 mL of
water
5DISPOSAL OF SEWAGE SLUDGE
- ANAEROBIC DIGESTION anaerobic bacteria break
down organics into methane gas (NH4) and CO2.
Methane is trapped and used to heat the digester
to 95F. - END PRODUCT Soil conditioner for gardens
(humus). - 2. FERTILIZER sludge is rich in plant
nutrients and can be dried (pelletized) and sold
as a fertilizer. - PROBLEM Combined sewer (industrial, residential
and storm water combined may be high in heavy
metals and PCBs (NYC SLUDGE!)
6WATER POLLUTIONCONTROL LAWS
1988 Ocean Dumping Ban Act barred ocean
dumping of sewage sludge at the 200 mile marker.
All cities were in compliance by 1988 EXCEPT for
NYC, who were permitted to dump until June,
1992. 1972 Water Pollution Control Act EPA
established regulations for the discharge of
pollutants in the USA. It gave the EPA authority
to implement pollution control programs and set
ambient water quality standards for all
contaminants entering surface waters. It also
funded the construction of sewage treatment
plants.
7WATER POLLUTION CONTROL LAWS
- The Federal Water Pollution Control Act was
amended in 1977 and came to be known as the Clean
Water Act. The ACT does NOT address water
quantity or groundwater, ONLY water quality.
Initially addressed point source, since the
1980s has come to address nonpoint source issues
as well.
8WATER POLLUTION CONTROL LAWS
- Great Lakes Critical Programs Act, 1990, put in
place part of the Great Lakes Water Quality
Agreement between the USA and Canada. This law
required the EPA to establish water quality
criteria to address 29 toxic pollutants with
maximum levels that are safe for humans,
wildlife, and aquatic life.
9GENETIC POLLUTION(NON-NATIVE SPECIES)
- 1. Zebra Mussel 1986 larvae of zebra mussel
arrived in ballast water discharged from a
European ship.
10ZEBRA MUSSEL DISTRIBUTION
11QUAGGA MUSSEL
Invaded the Great Lakes area when it
hitch-hiked its way in on a Russian
freighter. More damaging than zebra mussel
because it has a greater tolerance range (can
survive at greater depths and tolerate more
extreme temperatures). There is concern that it
will colonize Chesapeake Bay and parts of Florida.
12QUAGGA MUSSEL DISTRIBUTION
13BAD NEWS ON MUSSEL INVASION
- No known predators, out-competes food supply of
native shellfish, clogs irrigation pipes, shuts
down water intake systems for power plants, fouls
beaches, and grows in huge masses on boat hulls
and piers.
14GOOD NEWS ON MUSSEL INVASION
- Mussels are filter feeders and improve water
clarity tremendously. - Water clarity stimulates and promotes growth of
subaquatic vegetation (primary producers),
therefore, increases energy flow in the aquatic
environment and reducing waste matter!
15WATER HYACINTH
- 1 woman from Florida took 1 plant from an exhibit
to put in her pond because the flower was so
beautiful. - It reproduces rapidly and doubles its population
in two weeks. - It is native to Central and South America NOT
Florida. It is now the 1 invasive aquatic weed
in the southeast!
16PROBLEMS
- It as displaced natural species of plants and
fish and clogged ponds, streams and canals. - Scientists have introduced the non-native water
hyacinth beetle (primary consumer), a snail from
Puerto Rico and the grass carp from Russia! - CHAOS!!! FBL
17WATER HYACINTH
18OTHER AQUATIC NON-NATIVE SPECIES
- EURASIAN WATER MILFOIL
- SNAKEHEAD FISH
- GOBI FISH
19THERMAL POLLUTION
- Thermal pollution occurs when heated water
produced during industrial processing or nuclear
energy generation is released into waterways. - The water returned to the aquatic environment is
warmer than the surrounding water causing the
solubility of oxygen to decrease (DO drops). - Organisms that have a limited tolerance range for
temperature variation or rapid thermal changes
will go into thermal shock and die.
20THERMAL POLLUTION
21RADIOACTIVE POLLUTION
- Wastes from mining of uranium and plutonium as
well as refinement of metals. These materials go
to combined sewage treatment plants or directly
enter surface waters through runoff.
22WAYS TO REDUCE WATER POLLUTION
- Reduce the toxicity or volume of pollutants.
- Shift to pollution prevention instead of
pollution cleanup () - Replace organic-based solvents and paint thinners
with water-based products. - Reuse wastewater instead of discharging it.
- Set up artificial treatment wetlands for the
wastewater to pass through be fore discharge. - Cant do any of this without educating the public
and winning the support of BIG INDUSTRY. They
must view it as a profitable venture. THEN Govt.
will be on board!
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