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Eutrophication

Eutrophication. What is eutrophication?. Eutrophication -  the process by which a body of water becomes enriched in dissolved nutrients that stimulate the growth of algae, resulting in the depletion of dissolved oxygen.

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Eutrophication

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  1. Eutrophication

  2. What is eutrophication? Eutrophication -  the process by which a body of water becomes enriched in dissolved nutrients that stimulate the growth of algae, resulting in the depletion of dissolved oxygen.

  3. How does eutrophication reduce the dissolved oxygen in the body of water? http://www.absorblearning.com/media/attachment.action?quick=v3&att=2228

  4. Let’s look at Lake Atitlan in Guatemala

  5. Sewage, agricultural runoff and deforestation all contribute to the swirls of blue-green algae that formed in Guatemala's Lake Atitlán.

  6. Let’s fly over to Namibia

  7. Phytoplankton Bloom off Namibia:Off Namibia in November 2007 as a phytoplankton bloom grew and faded in the Atlantic Ocean. Such blooms are common in the coastal waters off southwest Africa where cold, nutrient-rich currents sweep north from Antarctica and interact with the coastal shelf. At the same time, the easterly trade winds push surface water away from the shore, allowing water from the ocean's floor to rise to the surface, bringing with it iron and other material. Caused by upwelling in the ocean

  8. Let’s fly over to the Barrents sea (where’s that?)

  9. Algal Bloom in the Barents Sea:Acoccolithophore is a tiny, surface-dwelling ocean plant that is coated with microscopic limestone (calcite) scales. This white coating makes the plant highly reflective. Coccolithophoresflourish in nutrient-poor, sub-polar waters. Like other types of microscopic ocean plants (phytoplankton), coccolithophores are an important food source for fish and other marine animals. Coccolithophore blooms occur when large numbers of the plants grow in one place. Such blooms can be large: The visible portion of this bloom covers about 150,000 square kilometers (57,000 square miles) or roughly the area of Wisconsin. 

  10. Let’s go to the Black Sea!

  11. In the spring of 2006, floods on the Danube River swept over broad stretches of farmland. The floods washed sediment, fertilizers, and animal waste into the Danube and the Black Sea. The extra iron, phosphates, and nitrates in the flood debris may be supporting the extensive bloom seen here. Such blooms can be both beneficial, because they provide food for fish, and dangerous, because decaying plant matter saps oxygen out of the water.

  12. Is anybody up for a trip to Lake Ontario?

  13. Anybody want to roll over to the Caspian Sea?

  14. The Volga River is Europe’s longest river, flowing some 2,300 miles from northwest Russia to the Caspian Sea. As it winds its way through Russia, it passes through several large cities, and it is lined with agriculture. The river picks up agricultural and industrial run-off, and these chemicals are deposited into the Caspian at the Volga River delta.

  15. Florida also has problems with eutrophication dead zones

  16. Chesapeake Bay

  17. Where was this picture taken? October 2000

  18. November 2004

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