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WATER WATER • Sixty-six percent of a human being is water. • Seventy-five percent of the human brain is water. • Seventy-five percent of a living tree is water. WATER • There is the same amount of water on Earth today as • • • • • there was 3 billion years ago. 70% of the Earth is covered by water 97% of water on Earth is salt water Three percent of the water on Earth is freshwater 5 Great Lakes contain at least 95% of fresh surface water in US and 20% of the world’s fresh surface water 77% is frozen in icecaps Only 1 % is available for human consumption. WATER HUMAN USES INCLUDE: • Agriculture • Drinking • Bathing • Cooking How do you use water on a daily basis? WATER The water we require comes from two sources: 1. Surface Water 2. Ground Water WATER POLLUTION Water Pollution - any chemical, biological, or physical change in water quality that has a harmful effect on living organisms and makes water unsuitable for desired uses WATER POLLUTION • Classes/Categories of water pollution • Disease Causing Agents (pathogens): i.e., bacteria, viruses, protozoa, and parasitic worms from domestic sewage from human and animal wastes • Oxygen Demanding Wastes: organic wastes that can be decomposed by aerobic bacteria which depletes oxygen WATER POLLUTION • Water-Soluble Inorganic Materials: water-soluble • • nitrates and phosphates, can cause excessive growth of algae and other aquatic plants that die and deplete the oxygen content (kills fish) Organic Chemicals: threatens human, animal and aquatic plant life, i.e., oil, gas, plastic, pesticides, detergents, ext. Sediments or Suspended Matter (largest class): particles of soil/solid that stay suspended in water and made the water cloudy, reduces photosynthesis and disrupts food webs and clogs harbors, reservoirs, channels and artificial lakes WATER POLLUTION • Water-Soluble Radioactive Isotopes: in tissues and organs and cause birth defects, cancer and genetic damages • Thermal Pollution: rise in water temp b/c of heat absorbed in water to cool power plants: lowers water and makes organisms more vulnerable to disease WATER POLLUTION • Genetic Pollution: deliberate or accidental • addition of nonnative species disrupts aquatic systems and crowd out natives: reduces biodiversity: principal way they are introduced = intake and ballast from ships Fecal Coliform: Good indicator for quality of drinking and swimming water is the number of coliform bacteria present in 100-mL sample – WHO recommends 0 colonies for drinking – EPA recommends max of 200 colonies for swimming – Avg. person excretes 2 billion bacteria a day WATER POLLUTION How do we test for pollution? • We detect water pollution through chemical • analysis, using living organisms as indicator species, computer models of aquatic life zones Air and water pollution through chemical analysis, using living organisms as indicator species, computer models aquatic life zones (saves $) WATER POLLUTION How are our freshwater resources polluted? Point sources of water pollution have a specific location (pipes, ditches, sewers): fairly easy to find and monitor: developed countries = controlled: developing = uncontrolled WATER POLLUTION How are our freshwater resources polluted? • Nonpoint sources of water pollution can’t be traced to • • 1 site (large land areas, runoff, surface flow) In US, sediment, inorganic fertilizer, manure, salts dissolved in water and pollutants = 64% of mass of pollutants in streams and 57% entering lakes Storm water causes 33% of contaminates in lakes and estuaries WATER POLLUTION Pollution of Streams and Lakes Pollution of streams - Flowing streams and rivers recover rapidly from degradable, oxygen demanding wastes and excess heat by a combination of dilution and bacterial decay (natural process which works as long as streams aren’t overloaded w/ pollutants: doesn’t get rid of slowly degradable and nondegradable pollutants) WATER POLLUTION • Oxygen sag curve: depends on stream’s volume, flow rate, temperature, pH level and volume of incoming degradable wastes • Extracting drinking water downstream rather that upstream (what we do now) would improve water quality WATER POLLUTION • Pollution control laws from the 1970s have increased the quality and number of wastewater treatment plants • Ohio’s Cuyahoga River (Cleveland): prompted city, state + federal officials to enact laws limiting the discharge of industrial wastes WATER POLLUTION • In developing countries waste water treatment is almost nonexistent (Soviet Union: Eastern European countries) • More than 2/3 of India’s water is polluted • 54 out of 78 monitored streams in China are polluted and 20% of its rivers are too polluted to use for irrigation WATER POLLUTION Pollution of Lakes • In lakes, reservoirs, and ponds, dilution is less effective than in streams • Stratified layers, volumes of water w/ little flow (reduces levels of dissolved oxygen) • Flushing and changing of water in lakes and large artificial reservoirs takes b/t 1 and 100 years WATER POLLUTION • More vulnerable to contamination by plant • nutrients, oil, pesticides, and toxic substances: destroy bottom life, and fish and birds that feed on contaminated aquatic organisms Thousands of waterfowl and fishes died at the Kesterson National Wildlife Refuge in the San Joaquin Valley in CA due to selenium contaminated water flowing into the lakes WATER POLLUTION Eutrophication: natural enrichment of lakes Cultural Eutrophication: process of human activities • • • • accelerating the input of nutrients Animal wastes fertilizes cropland and is stored in pits and lagoons that can pollute the air 1996: more that 40 animal waste spills killed 670,000 fish in Iowa, Minnesota and Missouri Hot weather and droughts produces more bacteria 1/3 of the 100,00 medium-large lakes and 85% of the large lakes near modern population centers in the US suffer from some sort of cultural eutrophication WATER POLLUTION Prevention of cultural eutrophication = advanced waste water treatment which bans/ limits the amount of phosphates in detergents, soil conservation, and land use control Cleanup methods = dredging bottom sediments, removing excess weeds, controlling plant growth w/ herbicides and algaecides, pumping air thorough lakes and reservoirs • Prevention is more effective and usually cheaper in the long run than pollution control • Seattle’s Lake Washington = success story from eutrophication when sewage was diverted into Puget Sound TYPES AND EFFECTS OF WATER POLLUTION TYPES AND EFFECTS OF WATER POLLUTION • Infectious Agents – Main source of waterborne pathogens is untreated and improperly treated human waste. • Animal wastes from feedlots and fields is also an important source of pathogens. – In developed countries, sewage treatment plants and pollutioncontrol devices have greatly reduced pathogens. • Drinking water generally disinfected via chlorination. – At least 2.5 billion people in less developed countries lack adequate sanitation, and about half of these lack access to clean drinking water. Oxygen-Demanding Wastes • Water with an oxygen content > 6 ppm will support desirable aquatic life. • Water with < 2 ppm oxygen will support mainly detritivores and decomposers. • Oxygen is added to water by diffusion from wind and waves, and by photosynthesis from green plants, algae, and cyanobacteria. • Oxygen is removed from water by respiration and oxygenconsuming processes. • Biochemical Oxygen Demand - Amount of dissolved oxygen consumed by aquatic microorganisms. • Dissolved Oxygen Content - Measure of dissolved oxygen in the water. • Effects of oxygen-demanding wastes on rivers depend on volume, flow, and temperature of river water. • Oxygen Sag - Oxygen levels decline downstream from a pollution Oxygen Sag Plant Nutrients and Cultural Eutrophication • Oligotrophic - Bodies of water that have clear water and low biological productivity. • Eutrophic - Bodies of water that are rich in organisms and organic material. – Eutrophication - Process of increasing nutrient levels and biological productivity. • Cultural Eutrophication - Increase in biological productivity and ecosystem succession caused by human activities. Inorganic Pollutants • Metals – Many metals such as mercury, lead, cadmium, and nickel are highly toxic. • Highly persistent and tend to bioaccumulate in food chains. – Lead pipes are a serious source of drinking water pollution. – Mine drainage and leaching are serious sources of environmental contamination. • Nonmetallic Salts – Many salts that are non-toxic at low concentrations can be mobilized by irrigation and concentrated by evaporation, reaching levels toxic to plants and animals. • • Leaching of road salts has had detrimental effect on many ecosystems. Acids and Bases – Often released as by-products of industrial processes. Organic Chemicals • Thousands of natural and synthetic organic chemicals are used to make pesticides, plastics, pharmaceuticals, pigments, etc. • Two most important sources of toxic organic chemicals in water are: – Improper disposal of industrial and household wastes. – Runoff of pesticides from high-use areas. • Fields, roadsides, golf courses • Human activities have Sediment © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Shoreline Erosion accelerated erosion rates in many areas. – Human-induced erosion and runoff contribute about 75 billion metric tons of suspended solids to world surfaces each year. • Sediment can either be beneficial (nourish floodplains) or harmful (smother aquatic life). From MM S Today 3(4) 1993, Minerals Management Service, U.S. Department of Interior. Pollution • Thermal Raising or lowering water temperatures from normal levels can adversely affect water quality and aquatic life. – Oxygen solubility in water decreases as temperatures increase. • Species requiring high oxygen levels are adversely affected by warming water. • Industrial cooling processes often use heat-exchangers to extract excess heat, and then discharge heated water back into original source. – Thermal Plume • Produce artificial environments which attract many forms of wildlife. – Can lead to large die-offs if plume disappears for extended period of time. WATER QUALITY TODAY • Areas of Progress – Clean Water Act (1972) established a National Pollution Discharge System which requires a permit for any entity dumping wastes in surface waters. • In 1999, EPA reported 91.4% of all monitored river miles and 87.5% of all accessed lake acres are suitable for their designated uses. – Most progress due to municipal sewage treatment facilities. Water Quality Today Areas of Progress • In 1998, EPA switched regulatory approaches. Rather than issue standards on a site by site approach, the focus is now on watershed-level monitoring and protection. – States are required to identify waters not meeting water quality goals and develop total maximum daily loads for each pollutant and each listed water body. Remaining Problems • Greatest impediments to achieving national goals in water quality are sediment, nutrients, and pathogens, especially from non-point discharges. – About three-quarters of water pollution in the US comes from soil erosion, air pollution fallout, and agricultural and urban runoff. • Single cow produces 30 kg manure/day. – Some feedlots have 100,000 animals. Remaining Problems – US Impaired River Miles Surface Waters in Other Countries • Sewage treatment in wealthier countries of Europe generally equal or surpass the US. • In Russia, only about half of the tap water supply is safe to drink. • In urban areas of South America, Africa, and Asia, 95% of all sewage is discharged untreated into rivers. • Two-thirds of India’s surface waters are Groundwater and Drinking Water • About half the US population, and 95% of rural residents, depend on underground aquifers for drinking water. – For decades, groundwater was assumed impervious to pollution and was considered the gold standard for water quality. • Estimated 1.5 million Americans fall ill from fecal contamination annually. • EPA estimates 4.5 trillion liters of contaminated water seep into the ground in the US every day. – MTBE - Gasoline additive, and suspected carcinogen, is present in many urban aquifers. – In agricultural areas, fertilizers and pesticides commonly contaminate aquifers and wells. Groundwater Pollution • Ocean Estimated 6Pollution million metric tons of plastic bottles, packaging material, and other litter tossed from ships into the ocean annually. – Few coastlines in the world remain uncontaminated by oil or oil products. WATER POLLUTION CONTROL • Source Reduction – Cheapest and most effective way to reduce pollution is avoid producing it or releasing it into the environment. • Studies show as much as 90% less road salt can be used without significantly affecting winter road safety. • Soil Conservation • Banning phosphate detergents WATER POLLUTION CONTROL Dioxin concentration in herring gull eggs on Scotch Bonnet Island In Lake Ontario Human Waste Disposal • More than 500 pathogenic bacteria, viruses, and parasites can travel from human or animal excrement through water. • Natural Processes – In many areas, outdoor urination and defecation is the norm. • When population densities are low, natural processes can quickly eliminate waste. Municipal Sewage Treatment • Primary Treatment - Physical separation of large solids from the waste stream. • Secondary Treatment - Biological degradation of dissolved organic compounds. – Effluent from primary treatment transferred into trickling bed, or aeration tank • Effluent from secondary treatment is usually disinfected (chlorinated) before release into nearby waterway. • Tertiary Treatment - Removal of plant nutrients (nitrates and phosphates) from secondary effluent. – Chemicals, or natural wetlands. • In many US cities, sanitary sewers are connected to storm sewers. – Heavy storms can overload the system, causing by-pass dumping of raw sewage and toxic runoff directly into watercourses. Municipal Sewage Treatment Water Remediation • Containment methods confine liquid wastes in place, or cap surface with impermeable layer to divert water away from the site. • Extraction techniques are used to pump out polluted water for treatment. – Oxidation, reduction, neutralization, or precipitation. • Living organisms can also be used WATER LEGISLATION • Clean Water Act (1972) – Goal was to return all US surface waters to “fishable and swimmable” conditions. • For Point Sources, Discharge Permits and Best Practicable Control Technology are required. – Set zero discharge for 126 priority toxic pollutants. Clean Water Act (1972) • Areas of Contention – Draining or Filling of Wetlands • Many consider this taking of private land. – Un-funded Mandates • State or local governments must spend monies not repaid by Congress. Other Water Legislation • Safe Drinking Water Act • CERCLA (1980) – SARA (1984) • Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (1972) • London Dumping Convention (1990) • BUT: Laws are only as good as: – To the degree they are not weakened. – To the degree they are funded. Units for Measuring Water Quality PARTS PER MILLION Most dissolved substances found in water are measured in parts per million (ppm) or even smaller amounts. This means that for every one million parts (units) of water there is a certain number of parts of the substance. It is also expressed as milligrams per liter. There are 1000 milliliters in a liter and 1000 milligrams in a gram. For example, a dissolved oxygen reading of 8 ppm means there are 8 milligrams of oxygen for every 1000 milliliters of water. 8/1000 gram 1000 milliliters = 8/1,000,000 (8 parts per million) Concentrations of certain substances are also measured in parts per billion, parts per trillion and so on. These are very small amounts but certain substances can be harmful even at these very low concentrations. Water Quality Indicators We will now take a look at the water quality indicators. ALKALINITY Alkalinity refers to the water’s ability to neutralize acids. Alkalinity is produced by minerals such as limestone. Limestone is a type of ocean sediment composed of calcium carbonate. Limestone bedrock areas often have caves and sinkholes, known as Karst. Water with low alkalinity is usually acidic. Ammonia Ammonia is produced by the decay of organic matter and animal waste. Ammonia is toxic to most aquatic life, especially at high pH. Bacteria readily convert ammonia to nitrate. (a plant nutrient) Ammonia Ammonia is a form of nitrogen and part of the Nitrogen Cycle. BACTERIA Most bacteria are important in nutrient and other organic cycles. Excess nutrients cause algal blooms. As algae die and decay, the high bacterial load rapidly consumes dissolved oxygen. Certain types of bacteria indicate animal and human waste pollution. Escherichia coli are coliform bacteria found in the intestines of warm-blooded organisms. Most strains are harmless but one E. coli strain can cause severe diarrhea and kidney damage. DISSOLVED OXYGEN Dissolved oxygen is a product of photosynthesis and diffusion. The warmer the water, the less oxygen it can hold. DISSOLVED OXYGEN Most organisms need at least 5 or 6 ppm of oxygen in order to survive. Even cold water rarely contains more than 15 ppm. Summer is often a time of oxygen stress for aquatic organisms. CONDUCTIVITY Conductivity measures the water’s ability to conduct an electrical current. Pure water is a poor conductor. CONDUCTIVITY The addition of dissolved solids, especially salts, increases the conductivity of water. Electrical current is measured using a conductivity meter. HARDNESS Hardness refers to the concentration of calcium and magnesium in water. Hard water has high concentrations of these elements. Soft water has low concentrations. Water hardness often originates from limestone. HARDNESS Area of the U.S. with limestone bedrock have hard water. Hard Water NITRATE Nitrate is a primary plant nutrient. Nitrate is water soluble and moves easily from surface to groundwater. Excess nitrate causes algal blooms that reduce water quality. Under normal conditions, the nitrogen cycle keeps the amount of available nitrogen in balance with the demands. However, excessive use of fertilizers and nutrient rich sewage release have created a surplus of nitrate. The result is eutrophication from excess algae and bacteria with reduced dissolved oxygen. PESTICIDES These chemicals are very complex. Effects on aquatic organisms – Moderately to highly toxic to mammals, molluscs, aquatic insects, amphibians and fish. pH pH is the measure of the hydrogen ion (H+) concentration. The pH scale is zero to 14. Seven is neutral, below seven is acidic, and above seven is basic (or alkaline). Most aquatic organisms exist within a pH range of 5.5 to 9.5. Carbon dioxide reacts with water to form a weak acid called carbonic acid. pH tolerance for most aquatic life Phosphate Phosphate’s concentrations in clean water is generally low; however, phosphorus is used extensively in fertilizer and other chemicals. Phosphate The primary sources of phosphates to surface water are detergents, fertilizers, and natural mineral deposits. Phosphate High levels of phosphate can over stimulate the growth of aquatic plants and algae. This in turn, will cause high DO consumption and death to fish and many aquatic organisms. Salinity Salinity refers to the salt concentration in water, mostly sodium chloride. Salinity is historically measured in parts per thousand (ppt) or grams per liter. Salinity Saltwater can cause problems when it replaces fresh groundwater near the coastal areas. Sediment Erosion causes loose soil to enter the waterways Sediment Suspended sediment blocks sunlight to plants and reduces dissolved oxygen. As sediments settle, they can smother bottom (benthic) organisms. TEMPERATURE Temperature is measured in Fahrenheit and Celsius degrees. Temperature can be measured using field thermometers but digital probes are much more accurate. Most aquatic organisms live within a temperature range of +32º F (+0º C) to 90º F (32º C). Rapid temperature change and temperature extremes can stress aquatic organisms. Temperature affects the oxygencarrying capacity of water. 14 Dissolved Oxygen (ppm) 12 10 8 6 4 ____________________________________ Winter Summer As the water warms, the amount of dissolved oxygen decreases. TOTAL DISSOLVED SOLIDS (TDS) TDS is the measure of the material dissolved in water. This measure is related to hardness, salinity and conductivity. Hard water has more TDS than soft water. TOTAL SUSPENDED SOLIDS (TSS) TSS is the measure of the sediment suspended in the water. TSS is related to turbidity. Water with high TSS usually has high Total Dissolved Solids (TDS) as well. TURBIDITY Turbidity refers to water clarity. Sediments suspended in the water increase turbidity. A secchi disk is one type of instrument used to measure turbidity. TOXIC CHEMICALS Toxic chemicals usually come from industry and energy production. The effects are often not known until years after they have entered the environment. Toxic chemicals include heavy metals (lead, mercury), organic compounds (DDT, PCB), inorganic substances (arsenic) and others.