1 / 18

Investigating the Cause of the Fishkill

Unit 1 Section C. Investigating the Cause of the Fishkill. Water is the universal solvent It doesn’t dissolve everything, but more than most other solvents Why? Water is a polar molecule It has electrical properties It is held together with covalent bonds. Lets Talk about Water.

abla
Download Presentation

Investigating the Cause of the Fishkill

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 1 Section C Investigating the Cause of the Fishkill

  2. Water is the universal solvent • It doesn’t dissolve everything, but more than most other solvents • Why? • Water is a polar molecule • It has electrical properties • It is held together with covalent bonds Lets Talk about Water

  3. Look at the Molecule

  4. Sharing Electrons • Covalent Bonds involve sharing electrons • But those electrons are not necessarily shared evenly • Oxygen hogs the electrons • Hydrogen is missing the ones O is hogging

  5. Water is Polar • The water molecule has two ends, POLES • A + pole and a – pole • This polarity is why water does all the cool stuff it does • This polarity is why water can dissolve ionic compounds like salt, NaCl

  6. Factors Effecting Solubility • Each solute dissolves differently • In the set of solubility curves to the right, what is the biggest factor that effects solubility? • Right! Solvent Temperature

  7. What about Gases? • NH3 is a gas • Describe it’s solubility as the water temp changes. • See Figure 27 on page 62 in your book • What else effects the solubility of gases? How?

  8. DO, Dissolved Oxygen is important • Oxygen gas gets dissolved in water • That is the oxygen the fish breathe • Aeration is the process by which air is mixed with water to dissolve oxygen and other gases

  9. Heavy Metals • Metal ions exist in natural water sources • They get dissolved as water percolates through soil and bedrock in an aquifer • Some minerals (metal ions) are fine • Some can be deadly

  10. Lead, Cadmium and Mercury • These elements are called heavy metals • They can all dissolve in water, and all cause health problems for human and other organisms • http://search.usatoday.com/search/search.aspx?qt=news%2Cyss%2Cweb%2Crel%2Cimg%2Ctop10%2Ckmatch&nr=5&s=sb&kw=mercury&goBtn2.x=13&goBtn2.y=9

  11. Heavy metals can cause a variety of health problems • Organ damage: liver, kidney, heart • Central nervous system: motor control, brain function • Developmental problems: physical and intellectual Heavy metal Poisoning

  12. Recently in Euclid Creek The Euclid Creek Watershed drains Richmond Hts, Lyndhurst, South Euclid, Cleveland Hts, University Hts, part of Cleveland and Euclid. Tributaries feed into Euclid Creek which flows directly into lake Erie WKYC, Channel 3 just did a story on a recent fishkill reported there www.wkyc.com Dissolved material Can Cause A Fishkill

  13. Water will dissolve materials that are similar Water is polar and held together with covalent bonds Water will dissolve solutes that are polar Water will dissolve some ionic salts too Water will not dissolve materials that are non-polar Like Dissolves Like

  14. Do not have any + or – characteristics There is nowhere for the polar water molecule to “grab” and “tear” the nonpolar molecule apart. Nonpolar molecules cannot be dissolved by water They can be dissolved by nonpolar solvents Styrofoam will dissolve in gasoline for example (under the supervision of an adult and outdoors) Nonpolar Solutes

  15. Nonpolar Solutes Would be Visible • Nonpolar solutes do not dissolve • We should be able to catch them with a filter • Or skim them off the top

  16. pH scale • The pH of the water in an ecosystem is important • The pH scale measures the acidity or alkalinity of solutions • The pH scale goes from 0 to 14

  17. Changing PH • Most aquatic ecosystems’ pH is near 7, maybe a little higher • Aquatic ecosystems have chemical buffers that neutralize excess acids or bases and minimize pH change • However, events may occur which overwhelm that protection • A change in pH by 1 unit, is actually a power of 10. • If a stream’s pH goes from 7 to 5, it has become 102 or 100 times more acidic

  18. Acid Rain creates other Problems • Acid precipitation can destroy food webs • Acid precipitation can interfere with development of larva and fish/amphibian eggs • Acid precipitation can dissolve heavy metal ions out of bedrock

More Related