APES Unit 6 Water Pollution
Basic pH
8-14
Biomagnification
Accumulation of pollutants at successive levels of the food chain
What is the largest single use of freshwater?
Agricultural
How do POPs cause harm in the environment?
Are soluble in fat, so they accumulate in an organisms' fatty tissues
What pollutant is most likely to be released into groundwater supplies without human intervention?
Arsenic
What happens to sludge from a sewage treatment plant?
Can be deposited into landfill, can be incinerated, can be used as fertilizer
Where does drinking water come from?
Comes mostly from groundwater
What is a common characteristic of lakes undergoing cultural eutrophication?
Decreased levels of oxygen throughout the water column
What is HAB (Harmful Algal Blooms) caused by?
Explosive growth of harmful algae from sewage and agricultural runoff
The Clean Water Act
Federal Law setting a national goal of making all natural surface water fit for fishing and swimming by 1983, banned polluted discharge into surface water and required the metals be removed from waste
How can we prevent non-point pollution?
From planting buffers and locating feedlots away from steeply sloped land, flood zones, and surface water
Cultural eutrophication
Human activities accelerate the input of plant nutrients (mostly nitrate- and phosphate-containing effluents)
In a river ecosystem, dissolved oxygen concentrations drop quickly downstream from a point-source input of organic matter into the river. This effect is due to
Increasing bacterial activity as organic matter decays
What body of water is most susceptible to pollutants?
Lakes because the water is not mixed well and has little flow
Acidic pH
Less than 7
What heavy metal is associated with burning coal?
Mercury
What substance is released as a result of manufacturing plastics?
PCBs
Nonpoint source pollution
Pollution that comes from many sources rather than from a single, specific site
The removal of waste material from raw sewage using physical processes is called
Primary sewage treatment
What act creates maximum containment standards for community water supplies?
Safe Drinking Water Act
The removal of waste material from raw sewage using biological processes is called
Secondary sewage treatment
The U.S. Clean Water Act
Sets standards for allowed levels of key water pollutants and requires polluters to get permits
Point source pollution
Specific location (drain pipes, ditches, sewer lines)
What kind of pollution is a problem in developing countries?
Stream pollution from discharges of untreated sewage
Fecal coliform
Test used to indicate the likely presence of disease-causing bacteria in water
Bioaccumulation
The accumulation of a substance, such as a toxic chemical, in various tissues of a living organism.
Oxygen sag curve
The curve obtained when the concentration of dissolved oxygen in a river into which sewage or some other pollutant has been discharged is plotted against the distance downstream from the sewage outlet
Eutrophication
The natural nutrient enrichment of a shallow lake, estuary or slow moving stream, mostly from runoff of plant nutrients from the surrounding land
Advanced or tertiary sewage treatment
The type of sewage treatment designed to remove materials such as heavy metals and other contaminants
What is the purpose of chlorination in the wastewater treatment process?
To kill disease-causing organisms
Thermal water pollution
Usually from cooling power plants and other industries that raises water temperature which in turn has adverse effects on water systems
A stream that has a pH of 6.0 is
Weakly acidic
Traditionally, floodplains were very important for development of human habitation because
When rivers overflow they deposit nutrient-rich sediment for agriculture
Neutral pH
pH of 7