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Air Pollution. Toxicity Toxin- any substance that is inhaled, ingested, or absorbed and can damage an organism. Toxicity- a measurement of how biologically.

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Presentation on theme: "Air Pollution. Toxicity Toxin- any substance that is inhaled, ingested, or absorbed and can damage an organism. Toxicity- a measurement of how biologically."— Presentation transcript:

1 Air Pollution

2 Toxicity Toxin- any substance that is inhaled, ingested, or absorbed and can damage an organism. Toxicity- a measurement of how biologically harmful a particular toxin is.

3 Factors that influence toxicity Dosage over a period of time Number of times of exposure Size and age of exposed organism Ability of body to detoxify Organisms sensitivity (frogs!!!) Synergistic effect (more than one toxic substance-effects add up)

4 Dose response analysis Organisms are exposed to toxins at different concentrations until they die- concentration at which they die is recorded LD 50 - the dosage at which 50% of the exposed organisms die HIGH LD 50 = LOW TOXICITY LOW LD 50 = High Toxicity

5 Poison Any substance that has an LD 50 of 50mg or less per Kg of body weight

6 Two more words Acute effect- an effect caused by short exposure to a high level toxin –like a snake bite

7 Chronic effect- results from long-term exposure to low levels of toxin Example)-long term exposure to lead paint

8 You do in 2 min 1.What are toxins and toxicity 2.What factors influence toxicity 3.Which is better a high or low LD 50 – why 4.When is something considered to be poison? 5.Compare and contrast chronic vs acute effects

9 Pathogens! – something living that can make us sick 5 types Viruses Bacteria Fungi Protozoa Parasitic worms

10 Infection – results when a pathogen invades our bodies Disease- a change in health caused by the invasion of a pathogen

11 Brain eating amoeba

12 Vectors An organism that carries a pathogen and transmits or spreads the pathogen Example- Ticks carry Lyme’s Disease- tick bites deer, human, dog- that organism now has Lyme’s disease

13 Disease outbreak and weather changes

14 Risk- how likely it is that a person will become sick after being exposed to a certain pathogen Risk Assessment- a study conducted to calculate the risk of a specific pollutant or pathogen Risk Management- using strategies to reduce the amount of risk from a pollutant or pathogen

15 You Do & write too! What contemporary topics have we discussed that risk assessments have been conducted on? What are three risk management techniques to deal with the environmental effects of using of fossil fuels.

16 Air Pollution! Approximately 14 million metric tons of air pollution are released annually into the atmosphere in the US by human activities. –Worldwide emissions total around 2 billion metric tons. Developed countries have been improving air quality, while air quality in developing world is getting worse.

17 Natural composition of the atmosphere 78% nitrogen 21% oxygen 1% other – Carbon Dioxide, water vapor, etc.

18 The terms! Primary Pollutants - Released directly into the troposphere from a source, and are also toxic.Example sulfur dioxide from coal burning power plant You do- Identify 3 primary pollutants you have learned about in AP Environmental

19

20 Secondary Pollutants Secondary Pollutants – Pollutants that form because of chemical reactions often after entering the air and mixing with other environmental components or other types of pollution –Example> Acid rain formed when sulfur dioxide mixes with water vapor

21 Point source pollution: A specific location from where pollution is released Give three examples of a point source location Non point source pollution Pollution that does not have a specific point of release Example – cows releasing methane or cars releasing carbon monoxide

22 2 types of Air Pollution 1. Natural releases from the environment 2. Manmade pollutants

23 NATURAL SOURCES OF AIR POLLUTION Natural Forest Fires - Smoke Volcanoes - Ash and Acid components Sea Spray – Sulfur from algae Bacterial Metabolism - Methane Dust Pollen Mold

24 Human have always added pollution!

25 Large scale pollution began with the Industrial Revolution

26 You do Identify and describe one way the industrial revolution significantly increased air pollution? Explain the difference between point source and non point source pollution and give an example of each Explain the difference between primary and secondary pollutants.

27 Environmental Protection Agency Government agency designed to protect human health and the environment- enforces regulations and laws passed by congress.

28 Man Made pollution

29 The dirty ½ dozen/ Criteria pollutants- the six pollutants that do the most harm to human health and welfare –Carbon monoxide –Lead (Pb) –Ozone (O 3 ) –Nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ) –Sulfur dioxide (SO 2 ) –Particulates

30 How do you know if there is too much ppb – parts per billion (small amounts) ppm- parts per million (large amounts) EPA has mandated “maximum ambient air levels” for the criteria pollutants

31 Carbon Monoxide Released from burning fossil fuels- 60% from vehicles Hazardous to humans because it binds to hemoglobin in the blood. Hemoglobin carries oxygen, if it is bound to CO it cannot carry oxygen. Hemoglobin has a “higher affinity” for CO than for Oxygen (it binds more easily to CO)

32 Lead Has been around since the Roman empire Released as a particulate (small particle) into the air- but then it lands on land and water and enters the food chain. Causes neurological disorders in children including mental retardation (& possibly aggression!) Used to be from leaded gas – now mostly from smelting (processing metal)

33 Ozone ONLY the ozone from human activity is harmful! Human created ozone is in the troposphere – not in the stratosphere where it should be! Secondary pollutant – formed when nitrogen oxides, heat, sunlight, and and Volatile organic compounds (voc’s) react. Tropospheric ozone is a big part of smog- Most ozone pollution comes from cars!

34 Nitrogen Dioxide/ Nitrogen Oxides NO 2 / NO Formed when atmospheric nitrogen and oxygen react when exposed to high temperatures Released from combustion engines and industrial combustion (coal burning power plants) Can also be a secondary pollutant- and is found in smog and acid rain

35 Sulfur Dioxide (SO 2 ) Colorless gas with horrific odor (smells like rotten eggs mixed with poop) Serious respiratory irritant Released through burning of coal- scrubbers on coal plants can reduce emissions Also released through smelting, making pulp (for paper),fossil fuels and gas appliances Mixes with water vapor to form acid rain

36 Particulate matter Small particles of solid or liquid Light enough to be carried in air Humans breath in they irritate respiratory passages (lungs) Examples are soot, and sulfate aerosols

37 You should recognize NO x So x

38 VOC’s Volatile organic compounds –Carpet cleaners, dry cleaners, oils, paints, glues/adhesives –Of 188 air toxics listed in Clean Air Act, two- thirds are VOC’s.

39 Progress Significant decreases in lead and carbon monoxide because of no leaded gas and engines that burn fuel completely However other pollutants are increasing – like Carbon Dioxide and VOC’s

40 SMOG

41 London 1952 Industrial smog led to the death of 10,000 people in London- high levels of smog led to tuburculosis, pneumonia, and bronchitis Lead to the Clean Air Act of 1952 in England

42 Industrial Smog Caused by burning of oil/coal CO and CO 2 and SO 2 combine with particulate matter Weather can affect smog- air inversions trap fog/pollutants and increase smog

43 Photochemical Smog Formed on hot sunny days in urban areas Heat causes ozone formation from NOx compounds NOx and VOC’s and Ozone combine to form smog with a brownish color LA! (and Athens Greece) Athens has laws about which days you can drive – LA does not…..

44 You Do Name and describe the six criteria pollutants What is a VOC What is Smog- how is it formed What progress has been made in remediating air pollution What laws were created to protect our air?


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