Title: Water Pollution
1Chapter 14 Water Pollution
2Water Facts
- Every 20 seconds, a child dies from a
water-related illness in the world - More than 3 times as many people lack access to
clean water than live in the United States - More people have cell phones worldwide than have
access to a toilet - Half of the hospital beds in the world are
occupied by patients suffering from diseases
associated with lack of access to safe drinking
water, inadequate sanitation, and poor hygiene - Diarrhea is the second leading cause of death
among children under five in the world. It kills
more children than malaria, AIDS, and measles
combined - Of the 60 million people added to the world's
towns and cities every year, most move to
informal settlements (i.e. slums) with no
sanitation facilities - An American taking a five-minute shower uses more
water than the average person in a developing
country slum uses for an entire day - 1.1 billion people still practice open defecation
- In 3 days, the amount of untreated fecal matter
in the world would fill up the Superdome
Courtesy of water.org
3Water Pollution
- Water pollution - the contamination of streams,
rivers, lakes, oceans, or groundwater with
substances produced through human activities and
that negatively affect organisms - Point sources - distinct locations that pump
waste into a waterway - Nonpoint sources - diffuse areas, such as an
entire farming region, that pollutes a waterway
4Point source
Nonpoint source
5Point Source vs. Nonpoint Source
- It is easier to control pollution that comes from
a distinct source than pollution that does not
come from a distinct source - Point sources discharge pollutants at specific
locations through pipes, ditches, or sewers (ex
factories, sewage treatment plants, mines, oil
wells, oil tankers) - Nonpoint sources cannot be traced to a single
site of discharge (ex acid deposition, runoff,
seepage into groundwater) - Nonpoint source water pollution from agriculture
is the largest source of water pollution in the
U.S. (64 of pollutants entering streams and 57
of pollutants entering lakes)
6Human Wastewater
- Water produced by human activities such as sewage
from toilets and gray water from bathing and
washing clothes/dishes
7Warm-Up
- What is the difference between point source and
nonpoint source pollution? - Name 2 examples of each.
8Human Wastewater
- Oxygen-demanding waste organic matter that
enters a body of water and feeds microscopic
decomposers that use oxygen - Nutrients that are released from wastewater can
make the water more fertile, causing
eutrophication - Wastewater can carry a wide variety of
disease-causing organisms
9Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD)
- BOD - the amount of oxygen a quantity of water
uses over a period of time at a specific
temperature - Lower BOD values indicate the water is less
polluted - Higher BOD values indicate the water is more
polluted
10Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD)
- BOD the amount of dissolved oxygen needed by
aerobic decomposers to break down organic
materials in a certain volume over a 5day
incubation period at 20 C - It is measured as a rate (mg O2 per liter per 5
days)
11Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD)
- Dissolved oxygen (DO) is an indicator of water
quality and measured in ppm - DO supplies oxygen to fish, amphibians, and
zooplankton in water - It is the basis of aquatic food chains
12Eutrophication
- Eutrophication - an abundance of fertility in a
body of water - Caused by an increase in nutrients, such as
fertilizers - Eutrophication can cause a rapid growth of algae,
which eventually dies and causes the microbes to
increase the BOD
Courtesy of www.lakescientist.com
13Oxygen Sag Curve
- Flowing water (including rivers and streams) can
recover rapidly from oxygen-demanding wastes by
dilution and bacterial decay
14Dead Zone
15Dead Zone
16Pollution of Lakes
- Natural nutrient enrichment of lakes is called
eutrophication - Cultural eutrophication -human activities
accelerate the input of nutrients to a body of
water
17Courtesy of www.lakescientist.com
18Common Diseases from Human Wastewater
- Cholera
- Typhoid fever
- Stomach flu
- Diarrhea
- Hepatitis
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20Fecal Coliform Bacteria
- Fecal coliform bacteria group of bacteria found
in the intestines and feces of vertebrate animals - Escherichia coli (E. coli) is usually the
bacteria tested for its presence indicates a
risk of other wastewater pathogens
21Warm-Up
DO
BOD
22Wastewater Treatment
- Septic systems - a large container that receives
wastewater from a house - Primarily used in rural and suburban areas
- Traps large solids in the tank and discharges the
liquid over the leach field
23Wastewater Treatment
- Sewage Treatment Plants - centralized plants in
areas with large populations that receive
wastewater via a network of underground pipes - Primary sewage treatment involves screens and
settling tanks to remove solids from sewage - Secondary sewage treatment uses biological
processes to break down biodegradable,
oxygen-demanding wastes
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26Sludge to Fuel
http//www.waste-enterprisers.com/our-businesses/
27Treatments for Animal Wastewater
- Manure lagoons - large, human-made ponds lined
with rubber to prevent the manure from leaking
into the groundwater - After the manure is broken down by bacteria, it
is spread onto fields as fertilizer
28Heavy Metals and Other Substances that can
threaten human Health and the Environment
- Lead
- Enters water through lead pipes
- Can cause behavioral problems, learning
disabilities, and kidney problems - Arsenic
- Enters water through natural deposits, coal
mining/burning, and pesticide use - Can cause cancer, nervous system problems, birth
defects - Mercury
- Enters water through natural deposits, coal
burning, and mining - Can damage nervous and immune systems, and
embryos - Acids
- Synthetic organic compounds (SOC)
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30World Mercury Production
31Acid Damage
1908
1969
- Acid Deposition lower pH due to air pollution
(CO2, SOx, NOx) produces lower than normal pH in
rain and snow - Acid Mine Drainage pyrite breaks down in
groundwater, creating low pH water
32Acid Deposition
33Acid Deposition
34Acid Mine Drainage
35Synthetic Organic Compounds (SOC)
- Pesticides inert ingredients DDT, atrazine
- Hormones pharmaceuticals estrogen, caffeine,
antibiotics - Military compounds perchlorates
- Industrial compounds PCBs, PBDEs
36Synthetic Organic Compounds (SOC)
- Bioaccumulation increase in tissue
concentrations of a material above normal
environmental levels - Biomagnification - increase in concentration of
materials in organisms from eating the tissues of
other organisms (concentration increases up the
food chain)
37Contaminants Found in U.S. Streams
38Groundwater Pollution
- Groundwater pollution is a greater threat to
humans than surface water pollution - Groundwater is typically recharged slowly, so
pollution lingers for long periods of time - Up to 25 of usable groundwater in the U.S. is
estimated to be contaminated - It is extremely difficult and expensive to
clean-up contaminated groundwater prevention is
more effective
39Groundwater Pollution Prevention
- Reduce sources of water pollution that feed into
the aquifer - Monitor aquifers near landfills and underground
storage tanks - Require leak detection systems and liability
insurance for existing and new underground tanks
that store hazardous liquids - Ban or more strictly regulate disposal of
hazardous wastes in deep injection wells and
landfills - Store hazardous liquids aboveground with more
safeguards
40Oil Pollution
- Oil is accidentally and deliberately released
into the environment from various sources - Most anthropogenic oil leaks are released in
normal operation of offshore wells, pipelines,
and storage tanks - Accidents can release large amounts of oil in a
short period of time
41Oil Pollution
42Oil Pollution
- Some aquatic organisms (esp. plankton and larvae)
are killed immediately - Oil coats birds and marine mammals, destroying
natural insulation and buoyancy - Heavy oil sinks to ocean bottom and washes into
estuaries, contaminating crabs, oysters, mussels,
etc. - Oil slicks on beaches harms intertidal life and
causes economic losses to tourism and fishing
industries
43Case Study Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
- On March 24, 1989, the Exxon Valdez tanker went
off course, hit submerged rocks in Prince William
Sound, Alaska, created the worst oil spill in
U.S. waters (at the time) - Coated 1,600 miles of shoreline, killed wildlife,
caused serious contamination - Exxon spent 2.2 billion on direct cleanup 1
billion fines damages another 5 billion
damages being appealed
44Case Study BP Oil Spill
- On April 20, 2010 the BP offshore drilling
platform Deepwater Horizon exploded in the Gulf
of Mexico - 11 workers were killed in the explosion
- Almost 5 million barrels of oil were spilled into
the water during the 87 day leak - BP has committed to pay up to 30 billion in
clean-up costs and compensation - http//www.ifitweremyhome.com/disasters/bp
Courtesy of USA Today
45Ways to Remediate Oil Pollution
- Containment using booms to keep the floating oil
from spreading - Chemicals (dispersants) that help break up the
oil, making it disperse before it hits the
shoreline - Bacteria that are genetically engineered to
consume oil
46Other Water Pollutants
- Solid waste pollution (garbage)
- Sediment pollution (sand, silt and clay)
- Thermal pollution
- Noise pollution
47Solid Waste Pollution
48Pacific Trash Vortex
Courtesy of good.net.nz
49Solid Waste Pollution
- Coastal areas have enormous inputs of waste into
oceans - Half of the worlds population lives within 60
miles of the ocean - About 35 of municipal sewage ends up virtually
untreated in U.S. ocean water - Many countries still dump large quantities of
toxic substances into the ocean
50Sediment Pollution
- Human activities increase the amount of sediment
entering waterways - Construction and plowing agricultural fields are
leading causes of increased sediment levels - Sediment reduces infiltration of sunlight and
clogs gills of aquatic species
51Thermal Pollution
- Two effects
- Temperature affects dissolved oxygen (DO)
- Thermal Shock
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53Noise Pollution
54Water Laws
- Clean Water Act (1972) - supports the protection
and propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife
and recreation in and on the water - Issued water quality standards that defined
acceptable limits of various pollutants in U.S.
waterways
55Clean Water Act
- Restores and maintains the chemical, physical,
and biological integrity of the nations waters - Sharply reduces direct pollutant discharges into
waterways - Finances municipal wastewater treatment
facilities - Manages polluted runoff
56Clean Water Act Programs
- Water quality standards (WQS)
- Policies against water degradation
- Waterbody monitoring and assessment
- Reports on condition of the nations waters
- Define total maximum daily loads (TMDL) of
pollutants - National Pollutant Discharge Elimination (NPDES)
system permit programs for point sources - Program for nonpoint sources
- Program regulating filling of wetlands and other
waters
57Water Laws
- Water Quality Act (1965) states directed to
develop water quality standards establishing
water quality goals for interstate waters - By early 1970s, every state has adopted such
water quality standards - States have revised their standards to reflect
new scientific information, the impact on water
quality of economic development, and the results
of water quality controls
58Water Laws
- Safe Drinking Water Act (1974, 1986, 1996) - sets
the national standards for safe drinking water - It is responsible for establishing maximum
contaminant levels (MCL) for 77 different
elements or substances in both surface water and
groundwater
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61Dealing with Water Pollution
- Agriculture is the primary nonpoint source of
water pollution - Reducing nonpoint water pollution requires
changing farming practices to reduce runoff from
fertilizer, pesticides, and livestock, as well as
reduce soil erosion - Non-farm use (golf courses, lawns, etc.) of
fertilizers and pesticides are another major
nonpoint source of pollution