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Chesapeake Bay Estuary and Water Pollution

Explore the Chesapeake Bay as an estuary and learn about the sources of water pollution, the impact of nutrients and sediments, the dangers of anthropogenic chemicals, and the efforts to restore the Bay. Discover the methods for treating human and animal wastewater, the hazards of heavy metals and oil spills, and other water pollutants.

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Chesapeake Bay Estuary and Water Pollution

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  1. Chapter 14 Water Pollution

  2. Objectives • Distinguish between point and nonpoint sources of pollution • Identify the ways in which human wastewater can cause water pollution • Evaluate the different technologies that humans have developed for treating wastewater • Identify the major types of heavy metals and other substances that pose serious hazards to humans and the environment. • Discuss the impact of oil spills and how such spills can be remediated • Identify contaminants that are nonchemical pollutants. • Explain the connections among industrialization, affluence, and water-pollution legislation.

  3. Title: The Chesapeake Bay • Answer in Cornell Style form on a separate sheet of paper. • 1. What is an estuary? • a. How is the Chesapeake Bay an estuary? • b. Can you think of any local areas like this? • 2. What is a watershed? • a. What type of areas are located within the Chesapeake Bay watershed? • 3. What hazards does an abundance of nutrients present to the Chesapeake Bay? • 4. What are the 3 major sources of nitrogen and phosphorous in the Chesapeake Bay? • a. What problems can an algal bloom pose to the Bay? • 5. What are sediments? • Why do sediments pose a problem to the Bay? • 6. What are anthropogenic chemicals? • a. What problems do these chemicals pose to the Bay? • 7. What is the Action Plan that has been developed to restore the Bay?

  4. Water Pollution • Water pollution- the contamination of streams, rivers, lakes, oceans, or groundwater with substances produced through human activities and that negatively affect organisms. • Point sources- distinct locations that pump waste into a waterway. • Nonpoint sources- diffuse areas such as an entire farming region that pollutes a waterway.

  5. Human Wastewater • Water produced by human activities such as human sewage from toilets and gray water from bathing and washing clothes or dishes.

  6. Three reasons scientists are concerned about human wastewater: • Oxygen-demanding wastes like bacteria that put a large demand for oxygen in the water • Nutrients that are released from wastewater decomposition can make the water more fertile causing eutrophication • Wastewater can carry a wide variety of disease-causing organisms.

  7. Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) • BOD- the amount of oxygen a quantity of water uses over a period of time at a specific temperature. • Lower BOD values indicate the water is less polluted and higher BOD values indicate it is more polluted by wastewater.

  8. Eutrophication • Eutrophication is an abundance of fertility to a body of water. • Eutrophication is caused by an increase in nutrients, such as fertilizers. • Eutrophication can cause a rapid growth of algae which eventually dies, causing the microbes to increase the BOD.

  9. Common Diseases from Human Wastewater • Cholera • Typhoid fever • Stomach flu • Diarrhea • Cholera • Hepatitis

  10. Treatments for Human and Animal Wastewater • Septic systems- a large container that receives wastewater from the house.

  11. Treatments for Human and Animal Wastewater • Sewage Treatment Plants- centralized plants in areas with large populations that receive wastewater via a network of underground pipes.

  12. Treatments for Human and Animal Wastewater • Manure lagoons- large, human-made ponds line with rubber to prevent the manure from leaking into the groundwater. After the manure is broken down by bacteria, it is spread onto fields as fertilizers.

  13. Do the Math: Building a Manure Lagoon Concentrated animal feeding operations is typically use manure lagoons to hold the manure produced by the cattle that are being held. If an individual animal produces 53 L of manure each day and the average concentrated animal feeding operations holds 900 cattle on any given day, how much manure is produced each day? Daily Manure Production = 53 L/animal X 900 animals = 47,7000 L/day • If a manure lagoon needs to hold 30 days’ worth of manure productions, what is the minimum capacity of the lagoon. • After the manure has broken down, you need to spread the manure onto farm fields. A modern manure spreader can hold 40,000 L of liquid manure. How many trips will it take for the manure spreader to remove the 30 days’ worth of manure that is held in the manure lagoon.

  14. Heavy Metals and Other Substances that can threaten human Health and the Environment • Lead • Arsenic • Mercury • Acids • Synthetic compounds (pesticides, pharmaceuticals, and hormones)

  15. Oil Pollution

  16. Ways to Remediate Oil Pollution • Containment using booms to keep the floating oil from spreading. • Chemicals that help break up the oil, making it disperse before it hits the shoreline. • Bacteria that are genetically engineered to consume oil

  17. Other Water Pollutants • Solid waste pollution (garbage) • Sediment pollution (sand, silt and clay) • Thermal pollution • Noise pollution

  18. Water Laws • Clean Water Act- (1972) supports the “protection and propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and recreation in and on the water”. • Issued water quality standards that defined acceptable limits of various pollutants in U.S. waterways.

  19. Water Laws • Safe Drinking Water Act- (1974, 1986, 1996) sets the national standards for safe drinking water. • It is responsible for establishing maximum contaminant levels (MCL) for 77 different elements or substances in both surface water and groundwater.

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