Water Pollution
Water Pollution Problem For many years, people dumped garbage into waterways Contamination caused: diseases such as cholera, typhoid, dysentery In 1885 in Chicago, 90,000 people died from a cholera outbreak Robert Koch- German doctor, linked cholera outbreaks to contaminated water People realized contaminated water was a problem and began dumping garbage further out at sea What is the problem with this??
Sewage Sewage – water that carries organic wastes from humans and industry Where does it come from? Toilets, sinks, washing machines, and industrial equipment The U.S. dumps approx. 8.9 trillion liters of sewage into the ocean each year Most of this waste is treated, but some may not be treated and can contain toxic chemicals and metals
Sewage Treatment Plants Sewage Treatment Plant – a facility that processes raw sewage before the sewage is returned to surface water systems Sewage screens that filter out plastics, fabrics, and metal objects treatment of solid materials called sludge, and the addition of bacteria and purifying chemicals Bacteria – break down organic pollutants Chemicals (chlorine) sanitize and deodorize These treatments do nothing to remove organic matter can cause eutrophication. Eutrophication: excess of nutrients in a lake or body of water What do you think about this? Good or bad?
Pathogens Pathogens – parasites, bacteria, and viruses that cause diseases in living things Many pathogens spend part of their lifecycle in water they enter the water through infected raw sewage or animal wastes cause human illness and even death With improved sanitation in developed countries diseases like cholera and typhoid are under control In developing countries – still a problem!
Malaria Disease caused by a protozoan Humans infected by mosquito Water serves as the breeding ground for the mosquitos Worldwide > 800 million people are infected with malaria One million people die each year Common in Africa, East Asia, and Latin America
Types of Water Pollution
Toxic Chemicals Toxic chemicals – elements and molecules that are directly harmful to living things Inorganic chemicals – elements or molecules not derived from organisms Organic chemicals – molecules containing atoms of carbon that are derived from organisms
Inorganic Chemicals Acids, salts, heavy metals, and plant nutrients Heavy metals – metallic elements with high atomic masses (lead, mercury, arsenic, chromium, etc) that are often from industrial processes Plant nutrients – molecules that do not contain carbon but are needed for plant growth (phosphates, nitrates) Enter water through seepage, runoff and direct discharge into lakes, rivers, and streams, and oceans
Heavy Metals Poisons Heavy metals are metallic elements with high atomic masses (that’s why their called HEAVY) EX: Arsenic, lead, nickel chromium and mercury Many heavy metals find their way into ground water as by-products of manufacturing products. EX: Plastics, paint In 17th century France mercury was used to treat material for hat-making. How might the hat-makers be exposed to mercury? What were the effects of mercury poisoning on the hat makers? Emotional disturbances Lack of coordination Shyness
Organic Chemicals Chemicals from living things or synthetically made, contain the element CARBON Gasoline, oils, plastics, some pesticides, fertilizers, solvents, and wood preservatives Enter water as: Wastes from petroleum refineries, chemical factories, food processing plants Runoff from farmland Crude oil spills
Minamata, Japan Animals began to behave strangely – birds fell out of trees, cats acted crazy Townspeople: headaches, dizziness, blurred vision, and numbness of hands and feet The cause of symptoms turned out to be mercury poisoning A plastics factory- dumped mercury directly into Minamata Bay This contaminated the fish, which the people ate Over 20 years, 8,000 people suffered paralysis or brain damage and several hundred people died.
Exxon Valdez 1989- oil tanker ran aground off coast of Alaska 42,000 metric tons of crude oil gushed into Prince William Sound Ecosystem was devastated and thousands of birds, mammals, and other organisms dies
Eutrophication Fertilizers and detergents contain nutrients, phosphates, and nitrates Promote the growth of algae and aquatic plants When plants die, get huge amounts of decomposing bacteria Bacteria use up all the oxygen and the fish die More than 65% of the lakes in the U.S. are affected
Radioactivity Radioactive elements fuels in nuclear power plants, as medicines, and in nuclear weapons Dangerous and difficult to handle Whether a solid or a liquid, they may result in water pollution In 1973, 1 million liters of radioactive waste leaked into the soil from the Hanford nuclear weapons site in Washington The radiation contaminated the fish and drinking water 2,100 people were exposed to dangerous levels of radiation
Thermal Pollution A large increase in water temperature due to human activity Occurs in lakes, rivers, or shallow bays near power plants or industrial sites Affects ecosystems in several ways: Increased water temperature decreases the amount of dissolved oxygen Increased water temperature increases the body temperature of fish, which increases their metabolism so they need more oxygen Fish suffocate because they can’t get enough oxygen Higher temperatures of water is also destructive to developing fish eggs
Laws 1898 laws were designed to control water pollution. The laws were not strong enough and not enforced. Little was known about the effects of pollution on ecosystems The politics of industry (money or environment?) Clean Water Act (1972): Congress passed this act which was an attempt to set water quality standards for all states