POSTER TEMPLATE BY: www.PosterPresentations.com Saving the Salton Sea: Alternatives to Reduce Harmful Pollutants Kira Tipotsch, Department of Biological.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What are Ecosystem Services? Goods and life supporting services provided by natural ecosystem. Goods timber fisheries pharmaceuticals Services pollination.
Advertisements

Impacts of Inland Activities on our Estuaries: Mitigation, Improving, and Reverting the Impacts of the Past, Present, and Future.
Long-Term Volunteer Lake Monitoring in the Upper Woonasquatucket Watershed Linda Green URI Watershed Watch ,
Kelsie & Luke Bio 1000 Water Use & Management and Water Pollution.
Agricultural BMPs An Educator’s Guide. What are Agricultural BMPs? Best Management Practices An approach to help farmers reduce or eliminate agricultural.
What is it? - Production of food through the growing of plants (Cultivation) Why do we need it? - Population growth leads to high demand for food - 10%
Water Pollution. Watershed A watershed is an area of land from which all the water drains to the same location, such as a stream, pond, lake, river, wetland.
Hydrosphere Only planet with correct atmospheric pressure and temperature to allow water to exist in all its phases 97% water held in ocean basins 2% water.
The Salton Sea By: Christine Yafuso. Background Located in Southeastern California Located in Southeastern California About 1000 km 2 in size About 1000.
The Shrinking Aral Sea Lesson Objectives
Environmental and Conservation Issues Kevin Fitzsimmons, Ph.D. Professor - University of Arizona Sec. / Tres. - American Tilapia Association President.
Water Quality and Extension Program Areas: Aquaculture Aquatic Invasive Species Aquatic Biology and Water Quality Kevin Fitzsimmons SWES.
Point Source POLLUTION: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Outcome: ES20-AE1 – Analyze the relationship between biotic and abiotic factors that provide criteria to determine the condition of aquatic systems. ES20.
WATER QUALITY. Sources of Water Pollution Water pollution results from some physical or chemical change that adversely affects human health or the health.
Do Now: We know that groundwater and river basins alone do not contain enough water to meet our present needs. Are there any ways that we can harvest the.
Water Quality Environmental Science Mr. Mead Environmental Science Mr. Mead.
Types of Water Pollution Sewage Disease-causing agents Sediment pollution Inorganic plant and algal nutrients Organic compounds Inorganic chemicals Thermal.
Land Uses & Water Pollution Sources Christopher Gale Bill Taft.
The Water Cycle and How Humans Impact It
KATLYND REESE AQUATIC ECOLOGY 9 NOVEMBER 2011 Hypoxia or “Dead Zones” in Aquatic Systems.
THE UNIVERSAL CODE Roberto Alvarado, Department of Physics, College of Arts and Sciences, and Honors College Faculty Mentor: Andrea Kirk, Honors College.
California’s Water Resources. California has many resources, none more important than water. The main sources of California’s freshwater supply are precipitation,
Bio-remediation for Selenium Making it Work for Agriculture.
Thickets of elm, poplar, reeds, and shrubs grow along the banks of rivers and lakes. Coniferous trees, such as spruce, larch, cedar, and juniper, grow.
SOIL WATER. IRRIGATION - artificial provision of water to support agriculture 70% of ALL FRESHWATER used by humans.
KEY CONCEPT Matter cycles in and out of an ecosystem.
Revision 1.What does the term “arid” mean? 2.Draw the water cycle. Include: Precipitation Transpiration Evaporation Infiltration Run off Condensation 3.
Emily Schweiss, Alex Birkley, Petr Carter, and Eric Hempelmen.
The Effects of Nutrient Pollution on the Neuse River Estuary Valerie Winkelmann.
Jeopardy Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 Q 5 Q 6Q 16Q 11Q 21 Q 7Q 12Q 17Q 22 Q 8 Q 13 Q 18 Q 23 Q 9 Q 14 Q 19Q 24 Q 10 Q 15 Q 20Q 25 Final Jeopardy Oceans.
Water Quality and the Chesapeake Bay David O’Brien NOAA Fisheries Service Gloucester Point, VA.
Wetland Wetland San Francisco Bay & Delta San Francisco Bay & Delta Wetland Wetland Steven Ortiz Per.1.
Jeopardy Rivers Water Cycle Freshwater Vocab Misc Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Lesson 1.5 Pg
Central & Southern Florida Project George Horne Deputy Executive Director Operations & Maintenance Resource Area.
The Past, Present, and Future
Land Uses & Water Pollution Sources By Joan Schumaker Chadde, Western U.P. Center for Science, Mathematics and Environmental Education. All photos by Chadde,
POSTER TEMPLATE BY: Primary Cilia in the Oligodendrocyte Lineage: New Insights Sarah Valliere, Department of Biology, College.
Watersheds. Key Terms 1.Watershed 2.Drainage basin 3.Floodplain 4.Deposition 5.Runoff/storm water runoff 6.Point-source pollution 7.Nonpoint-source pollution.
8-4 Why Are Freshwater Ecosystems Important? Concept 8-4 Freshwater ecosystems provide major ecological and economic services, and are irreplaceable reservoirs.
Phil Gruenberg, Executive Officer California Regional Water Quality Control Board - Colorado River Basin Proposed IID/SDCWA Transfer CRWQCB-R7 Staff Concerns.
OCEANS INTRO AND ESTUARY REVIEW Module 7. THE OCEAN IS A DYNAMIC SYSTEM- ALWAYS CHANGING!  The ocean is an important source of food and mineral resources.
Aral Sea Basic Facts/Recap Once the fourth largest freshwater sea in the world at over 26,000 sq. miles, the words Aral Sea mean Sea of Islands. Served.
Chapter 14: WATER RESOURCES
Water Pollution. Types of Water Pollution Point Source –From a single, traced source –Ex: drain pipes, effluent of sewage treatment Nonpoint Source –Scattered;
Workshop on Clean Energy Across the Border Holtville, California February 18, 2016 Jonathan M. Weisgall Vice President, Government Relations Berkshire.
Succession 1. Write in your notes: I can distinguish between primary & secondary succession. Learning Target!!!
The Chesapeake Bay: How is it Doing? An Overview of The Chesapeake Bay Watershed.
Nitrogen loading from forested catchments Marie Korppoo VEMALA catchment meeting, 25/09/2012 Marie Korppoo, Markus Huttunen 12/02/2015 Open DATA: Nutrient.
Chapter 14 Review Game.
Unit 4 Lesson 1 Human Impact on Water
The Science of Environmental Sustainability
Watersheds Review Science 8 SOL.
Which Way to the Sea?.
The Shrinking Salton Sea
Water Quality Think for a few moments about each question. Try to answer them into your notes. What is water quality? Are all sources of water affected?
2.1 Monitoring Water Quality
4.10 Why do we drain wetlands?
The Health of Our Ocean& Pollution
Land Uses & Water Pollution Sources
Eutrophication Nitrogen and Phosphorus are often limiting factors in plant growth. Therefore they are used in fertilizers to improve plant growth. However,
Water Pollution.
Eutrophication : a major issue
Aquatic Ecosystems.
Water Use.
Indicators of Water Quality
Land Uses & Water Pollution Sources
Indicators of Water Quality
Watersheds.
Presentation transcript:

POSTER TEMPLATE BY: Saving the Salton Sea: Alternatives to Reduce Harmful Pollutants Kira Tipotsch, Department of Biological Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, and Honors College Thomas La Point, Department of Biological Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences History The Salton Sea was formed in 1905 as an essentially freshwater lake when an unintentional levee break along the Colorado River caused overflow to enter its closed basin for 18 months until the levee was repaired (de Buys and Myers, 1999). Until the 1920s, freshwater fish from the original Colorado River flow flourished. As the water grew more saline, these species died off. Beginning in the 1950s, several salt water fish species were introduced into the Sea (Colorado River Board of California, 1992). In the 1960s two species of tilapia were released in nearby irrigation drains to control aquatic weeds, and soon found their way into the Sea. Today, Sea salinity has risen to levels for which virtually all fish except tilapia have died off (de Buys and Myers, 1999). Without intervention, salinity will continue to rise and the tilapia will die off as well, rendering the Sea essentially dead to animal life. Abstract The Salton Sea is the largest lake, on a surface area basis, in California. Its continued health as an avian sanctuary and recreation and fishery resource depends upon stabilizing and ultimately reducing the levels of salinity and key pollutants, primarily selenium and the nutrients phosphorous and nitrogen. Simply letting the Sea evaporate away is not an option as its toxic sediments would be picked up by the wind as blowing dust, and become a health hazard to southern Californians. Therefore, we propose to examine first, the sources and harmful effects of the key pollutants, and second, possible alternatives to reduce the levels of these pollutants. Summary Our research considers alternatives to stabilize and ultimately reduce the levels of salinity and key pollutants in California’s Salton Sea. The current problems of the Salton Sea, reflected in frequent die-offs of fish and birds, are rooted in a complex set of human and natural factors, including: Already salty Colorado River irrigation water that accumulates additional salts when used to leach farm fields; High levels of nutrients, such as phosphorus and nitrogen, in agricultural run-off, creating an overly-productive ecosystem that can rob organisms of oxygen; A below sea level depression with no outflows and wastewater inflows only balancing evaporation loss, resulting in an accumulation of salinity and pollutants over time; A hot arid climate; and, A reduction in inflows, due to current and proposed water transfers, which will accelerate the Sea’s transition to a water body unable to support fish. Methodology Previous research will be retrieved via the Academic Search Complete and Web of Science databases and analyzed for further information. Other articles and books will also be used. The study will be carried out by retrieving Salton Sea water and sediment data as well as inflow source data. This data will establish both the current and historical state of salinity and nutrient loading as well as sea level. Understanding the scope of the problems facing the Sea and likely outcomes with no action is necessary before solutions can be objectively evaluated. The effect of salinity and pollutants on the fish and bird populations in the sample data will be compared to the respective population data, as well as independent studies of the sensitivity of these populations to salinity and pollutants. This will include the historical frequency and effect of “algal blooms” due to heavy nutrient loading. Three major alternatives already under consideration by deBuys and Myers (1999), the Salton Sea Authority (2006), Redlands Institute (2007), and Schwabe et. al. (2008) to stabilize and then reduce salinity and pollutant levels will be evaluated based upon data collected from research. In addition, a fourth default alternative of inaction will be evaluated ( The Economist 2008): Water treatment using desalination plants; Exchange of water with the less salty nearby Gulf of California; Division of the sea by dike in order to separate the sea into a more-healthy portion cutoff from an evaporative basin; and No treatment, that is letting the sea die and/or evaporate away over time. Hypothesis References Acknowledgements Increasing salinity and pollutants have also taken a toll on recreational uses and property values. The Salton Sea was a major regional recreational destination in the 1950s and 60s, attracting more visitors annually than Yosemite National Park (de Buys and Myers, 1999). Seaside resort and residential communities sprung up along the shoreline. However, beginning in the early 1970s, with the Sea’s increasing salinity and other water quality problems, recreational use dropped off dramatically, and the shoreline communities now stand largely abandoned. Our hypothesis is that even though exchanging water with the Gulf of California is the most expensive alternative, it will be the best alternative because it is the only one that will provide permanent solutions to the Salton Sea’s problems. It would require building a canal, which would act both as a new inland port for Southern California and as a recreational/environmental asset for humans and wildlife in both Mexico and the United States. Wendy K. Wilkins, Ph.D., Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Gloria C. Cox, Ph.D., Dean, Honors College Andrea Kirk, Ph.D., Honors College Thomas La Point, Ph.D., Department of Biological Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences deBuys, W., Myers, J Salt Dreams. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press. Colorado River Board of California Report to the California Legislature on the Current Condition of the Salton Sea and the Potential Impacts of Water Transfers. Retrieved from the San Diego State University website: Salton Sea Authority Conceptual Salton Sea Authority Plan. Retrieved from Salton Sea Restoration website: Redlands Institute Proposed Solutions. Retrieved from The Salton Sea Database Program website: Schwabe, K.A., Schuhmann, P.W., Baerenklau, K.A., Nergis, N Fundamentals of estimating the net benefits of ecosystem preservation: the case of the Salton Sea. Hydrobiologia: The International Journal of the Aquatic Sciences. 604: The Economist Something smells a bit fishy. The Economist. 387: Retrieved from Academic Search Complete database.