Chapter 11 - Water Section 3 Notes Water Pollution • Water pollution – • Two underlying causes of water pollution: – Industrialization – Rapid Increase In Human Population • Industries are not the only contributor to water pollution. Sewage and agricultural runoff can cause the spread of eater pollution. • Two types of water pollution: – Point Source Pollution – Nonpoint Source Pollution Point Source Pollution • Definition – • Leaking septic tank • Unlined landfills • Leaking underground storage tanks (gas) • Water discharge from industries Nonpoint Source Pollution • Definition – • Chemicals added to road surfaces (salt) • Water runoff from city streets contains oils, gas, • • etc. Agricultural chemicals and livestock feces Oil and gas from boats Clean Up • Clean up of point or nonpoint is very difficult. • Nonpoint is the hardest of the two types to know where to stop the pollution from coming from. • 96% of the polluted bodies in the US were contaminated by nonpoint pollution. Pollutant Types and Sources Type of Pollutant Organic Chemicals Agent disease causing organisms animal and plant matter remains, feces, food waste pesticides, fertilizaers, plastics, detergents, gas, oil Inorganic Chemicals acids, bases, salts, industrial chemicals Heavy Metals lead, mercury, cadmium, arsenic mostly nonpoint sources mostly nonpoint sources: farms, lawns, golf courses, roads, unlined gas tanks point source and nonpoint source: industries, road surfaces, wastewater point source and nonpoint source: industries, unlined landfills, household chemcials, mining processes Physical Agents heat and suspended soilds point source and nonpoint source: industries, solids from soil erosion Pathogens Organic Matter Major Sources mostly nonpoint sources: sewage and animal feces Wastewater • Do you know where water goes after it flows down the drain in the sink? • Wastewater – Treating Wastewater • Waste Water Treatment Worksheet • Most of the wastewater from homes contains biodegradable materials that can be broken down by living organisms. • This does not work for towns and cities: to much waste water. Sewage Sludge • Definition – • Sludge may contain hazardous chemicals that have to be disposed in a special way. – Incinerated and buried in a contained landfill – Very expensive – Not all sludge is toxic and is mixed with clay to make bricks Artificial Eutrophication • Definition• Most organic matter comes naturally through the break down of leaves and animal waste. • Nutrients are essential to a balanced ecosystem but overabundance is a bad situation. • Fertilizers from farms, lawns, and gardens are the largest source of nutrients that cause artificial eutrophication. • Phosphate in laundry detergents and dishwasher detergents are a contributing factor and have be taken out of many brands. • Algal Bloom - Thermal Pollution • Definition – • Mostly from industries and their waste water. • It can only be a few degree increase and thermal pollution to happen. Groundwater Pollution • Can infiltrate through the ground to pollute the water. • Pesticides, herbicides, chemical fertilizers, and petroleum products are common groundwater pollutants. • Leakage of an underground tank is also a large contributor of groundwater contamination. Cleaning Up Groundwater Pollution • Groundwater pollution is one of the most challenging environmental problems that the world faces. • The ground is a natural filter but it can only filter so fast and so much pollution. Ocean Pollution • Ocean pollution is allowed to a certain point. Ship scan legally dump wastewater and garbage overboard in some parts of the ocean. • 85% of ocean pollution comes from land from runoff. Most of the activities that pollute the oceans occur neat the coast. EcoFact • In one year, ships dump almost 7 billion kg of trash in the ocean. About 75% of of ship waste comes from cruise ships. According to most international law, cruise ships are allowed to dump non-plastic waste – including untreated sewage, into the ocean. Oil Spills • P.291 Fig 21 • Oil spills have a dramatic effect, but they are • • responsible for only about 5% of oil pollution in the oceans. Most of the oil that pollutes the ocean comes from towns and cities. 200-300 million gallons of oil enter the ocean from nonpoint sources each year. That’s 10 times the amount from oil spilled by tankers. Water Pollution and Ecosystems • Many pollutants accumulate in the environment because they do not decompose quickly. • Biomagnification (or bioaccumulation)- • Biomagnification is one reason why many US states limit the amount of fish people eat from certain bodies of water. Cleaning Up Water Pollution • 1972 Clean Water Act (CWA) – set a goal that all natural surface water fit for fishing and swimming by 1983 and banned pollutant discharge into surface water. • 1972 Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act – EPA could control dumping of sewage wastes and toxic chemicals in US waters • 1975 Safe Drinking Water Act – Protect • • • groundwater and surface water from pollution. 1980 Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act – makes owners, operators, and customers of hazardous waste site responsible for cleanup of the site. 1987 Water Quality Act – established loan funds to pay for new wastewater treatment plants and created program to protect estuaries. 1990 Oil Pollution Act – attempts to protect US waterways from oil pollution by requiring that oil tankers in US water be double hauled by 2015.