ENVS 1126 Final Exam
mercury is used in the production of ___, for use in thermometers, batteries, and fluorescent light bulbs
chlorine
reaction to a chemical following exposure over a time scale of years:
chronic effects
there are no warnings of bioaccumulation and biomagnification until ___ cause problems
contaminants
the ___ splits north america into 2 watersheds: "east" & "west"
continental divide
___ & ___ merge to form larger and larger rivers
creeks streams
if bacteria take all of the dissolved oxygen, this leaded to ___ of the area by animals that need dissolved oxygen (dead zone):
death/avoidance
inject the wastes deep and eventually they will react with naturally occurring material to neutralize them:
deep-well injection
early in the industrial revolution, chemicals and sewage were dumped directly into U.S. waterways, contaminating ___ & causing ___
drinking water disease
___ makes water unappealing for swimming, drinking, boating, and fishing
eutrophication
exposure to asbestos is primarily achieved through the inhalation of these tiny ___ that are suspended in the air, often getting trapped deep within the lungs
fibers
a DO < 2or3 ppm kill ___ &___
finfish shellfish
low number on a plastic bottle:
flimsy plastic
shallow, narrow soil erosion grooves formed in slopes by water flow:
fluvial rills
water travels along ___
fluvial rills
the most significant sources of exposure to inorganic lead include __, ___, __, & ___
food water soil lead-based paint
1998-2010 wetlands were restored and created, but mostly ___ wetlands
freshwater (coastal wetlands continue to decrease)
marshes are dominated by ___ and short bushes and vegetation, but no trees
grasses
wetlands help recharge __
groundwater
how do chemicals get into the environment?
hairspray, pesticides, fertilizers, road salts, paints, adhesives, solvents, coal products, gas, oil, antifreeze, carwash soap, lubricants, cleaning fluids, etc
Anything that causes (1) injury, disease, or death to humans, (2) damage to personal or public property, or (3) deterioration or destruction of environmental components:
hazard
risk = ___ x ___
hazard vulnerability
BT concentrations in Bottlenose Dolphins were generally __ in older animals and ___ in males than femals
higher higher
in the Kannan study of bottle nose dolphins the ___ BT concentrations were highest, followed by ___, regardless of cetacean and regardless of the type of BT
liver kidneys
over time, lead will be stored in the ___, where it can remain there for years and released following high fever, osteoporosis, or pregnancy
long bones (arms, legs)
wetlands are usually in ares in __ elevation and __ water table, and are poorly drained
low high
bioaccumulation:
many synthetic organic chemicals that are soluble in lipids (fats) & they pass through cell membranes into the body's lipids
a low-lying, poorly drained wetland often found at the edge of lakes and streams:
marsh
rapid and malignant cancer of the lining of the lung or abdomen caused by asbestos:
mesothelioma
anaerobic sludge digesters use anaerobic bacteria in an oxygen-free environment, resulting in production of ___
methane
wetlands are major producers of:
methane gas
some non-reputable companies simply dumped barrels and pocketed the fees:
midnight dumping
total of all material thrown away from homes and commercial establishments and collected by local governments, including trash, refuse, or garbage:
municipal solid waste
bogs are mostly found in __, __, & ___
northeast great lakes southeast
wetlands remove sediment in surface runoff and thus reduce ___ in (and thus clogging of) streams
sedimentation
dead zones last from may to ___
september (until the water gets mixed in winter)
in the late 1800s, Pasteur, Snow, and others showed that ___ caused infectious disease
sewage-borne bacteria
a ___ brings all tub, sink, and toilet drains together. This is defined as raw sewage or raw wastewater
sewer system
in a swamp, water moves very ___
slowly
a wetland contains unique types of __, __, & __
soil plants organisms
sediment is eventually deposited as a layer of ___ on the bed or bottom of a body of water
solid particles
wetlands help absorb __ surges
storm
high number on plastic bottle:
sturdy plastic
a tax on chemical raw materials (trust fund for cleanup):
superfund
wetlands are supplied by __ & ___ water
surface ground
waste is discharged into a LINED pond, solid waste settles, water evaporates, and the layers continue:
surface impoundments
a wetland usually near rivers or lakes:
swamp
swamps are characterized by ___ & can be fresh or salt water
tall, woody trees
the high the number on a plastic bottle, ___:
the longer it takes to break down and the more times the material can be re-used
___ are extremely valuable and productive, including many endangered species
wetlands
the ___ are home to minks, beaver, muskrat, otters, shellfish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and fish; seasonal habitat for migrating species such as ducks and geese
wetlands
kannan paper wanted to determine:
what was killing the dolphins that were washing up dead on the shore in 1997
___ (microscopic animals) eat phytoplankton:
zooplankton
the process of eutrophication:
-nutrient enrichment allows rapid growth of phytoplankton -water turbidity increases and shades out SAV -dead SAV decreases food, habitat, dissolved oxygen
3 forms of mercury:
-organic (usually methyl, usually toxic) -elemental (mercury vapor) -inorganic (mercury compounds)
how did persistent organic pollutants (POPs) get to the Arctic Circle:
-persistence -biomagnification -transportability
non point-source pollution:
-poorly defined and scattered -agricultural runoff, storm water runoff, atmospheric deposition
methane production:
-produce from anaerobic decomposition inside the landfill where oxygen cannot reach -a component of greenhouse gases -flammable
public health measures to prevent diseases:
-purification and disinfection of public water supplies -sanitary collection and treatment of wastes -sanitary standards where food is prepared for the public -personal and domestic hygiene practices
strategies to control water pollution:
-reduce/remove the source (non-point source) -treat the water before release (point-source)
dioxin:
-slowly breaks down in the environment when exposed to ultraviolet rays of the sun, otherwise is a stable compound -indirectly breaks down the body's normal estrogen & decreases the number of estrogen receptors available for naturally occurring estrogen
lead affects blood formation:
-slows normal maturation of red blood cells in bone marrow -inhibits synthesis of hemoglobin
on-site septic tank and leaching field:
-solids sink in septic tank & are digested by bacteria -liquids flow to leaching field and then into soil
organic mercury poisoning:
-symptoms appear after 1-2 months -numb tongue/lips/fingertips, slurred speech, difficulty swallowing
inorganic mercury compound poisoning:
-symptoms: kidney damage, liver damage, interference with coordination, generalized tumors, hallucinations -symptoms frequent among 17th century hat makers who soaked animal hides in mercuric nitrate
gas wells:
-tap the landfills and use methane as fuel -390 gas well projects in US
coastal wetlands:
-typically associated with estuaries -include mangrove swamps, salt marshes, bays, and lagoons -wetlands along the Great Lakes considered coastal
sources of PCB exposure:
-using old fluorescent light fixtures or old TVs & refrigerators (may leak PCBs into air if too hot) -eating animal products containing PCBs -breathing air near hazardous waste sites tat contain PCB -drinking PCB contaminated well water -repairing and maintaining PCB transformers
occupational safety and health act (OSHA):
-workers right to know -material safety data sheets
the higher the BOD, the greater the likelihood DO will be ___
depleted
dead phytoplankton settle out, depositing __ on the bottom
detritus
an unwanted by-product from heating mixtures of chlorine and organic compounds in industrial processes:
dioxin
water hold much less __ than air
dissolved oxygen (DO)
in LA, __ are the major focus of wetland restoration efforts
diversion
a ridge of land separating distinct watersheds:
divide
watersheds are surrounded by ___:
divides
the watershed (land) AND the rivers/streams that drain from it:
drainage basin
in many developing countries, the same waterway are used for __, __ & ___ exp: Ganges River
drinking washing waste disposal
the creation of new land:
accretion
immediate reaction to a chemical following exposure:
acute effects
response:
acute or chronic effects
allow bacteria to feed on sludge in the absence of oxygen --> carbon dioxide+methane+water (biogas)
anaerobic digestion sludge treatment
a high BOD limits or precludes __ life
animal
stream flow rate:
area x velocity
asbestos is a collective term for a group of 6 fibrous silicate materials:
asmolite chrysotile tremolite actinolite anthophylite crocidolite
The accumulation of a substance over time, becoming toxic in various tissues of a living organism:
bioaccumulation
a measure of the amount of organic material in water, stated in terms of how much oxygen will be required to break it down biologically, chemically, or both:
biochemical oxygen demand (BOD)
the multiplying effect of bioaccumulation through the food chain, overtime making the organisms in the chain have more concentrated amounts of chemicals in their bodies:
biomagnification
a wetland that accumulates acidic spongy peat, often moss:
bog
the pitcher plant lives in ___
bogs
TBT (tributylin) weathers and over time breaks down, losing ___ groups
butyl
polyethylene terephythalate plastic (PETE):
carpets, jackets, film, strapping, new PETE bottles
settling:
-land is unstable and can't be used -houses, playgrounds, parks
problems of landfills:
-leachate -methane production -incomplete decomposition -settling -(S.L.I.M.)
dose= ___ x ___
-level of exposure -length of exposure
famous mass mercury poisoning in Minamata, Kyushu, Japan 1953-1961:
-local vinyl chloride company had been dumping inorganic Hg into Minamata Bay -bacteria converted it to organic mercury-->food chain-->fish -fish had 100,000 X Hg levels -one day, cats started acting weird & hurling themselves into the ocean to die -humans started to show symptoms -Minamata population shrunk from 50,000 to 33,000 -company didn't stop dumping until 1968
an oligotrophic lake:
-low nutrient= healthy -light penetrates deeply -watershed holds its nutrients, so little enters the lake -low nutrient levels support growth of SAV -benthic plants support a diverse aquatic ecosystem -high aesthetic, recreational, & fishing qualities
incomplete decomposition:
-many plastics aren't digestible by decomposing bacteria -biodegradable products were the answer -need water to degrade paper efficiently
PCBs in the body:
-may be estrogenic or anti-estrogenic -may bind to thyroid hormones -my bind to proteins in the blood that are supposed to bind to thyroid hormones, altering growth and metabolism -connection between paternal and PCB exposure ad birth defects
biofouling:
-mussels, barnacles, oysters, seaweed, bacteria -antifouling paints -slows ship speed -costs money to clean -excellent fishing at oil rigs -nasty looking bacteria growing on poles & other things at oil rigs
Cholera (vibrio cholerae):
-non inflammatory diarrhea -lack of access to clean drinking water -death is by dehydration -recovery is by re-hydration
acute lead poisoning:
release of lead stored in long bones through high fever, osteoporosis, or pregnancy
___ merge and empty into larger bodies of water such as creeks and streams:
rills
___ diversions are used to direct fresh water and associated sediment into wetlands
river
__ empty into the ocean at the mouth:
rivers
diversions decrease ___ and introduce sediment, restoring wetlands and increasing their sizes
salinity
clean air act 1970:
-identify the most widespread pollutants -set ambient standards (healthy baseline levels) -establish control methods and timetables to meet the standards
hazardous materials:
-ignitable -corrosive -reactant -toxic
the Clean Water Act of 1972 (CWA):
- Passed by Congress in response to public outrage about polluted water - Charged the EPA with restoring and maintaining the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of waters - One of the most effective environmental laws enacted
the Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1948:
-The first federal action regarding water pollution -Provided technical assistance but nothing else
Love Canal (near Niagara Falls, NY):
-1970s; area occupied by school and some houses, all built atop chemical waste dump -surface began collapsing, exposing barrels -fumes began escaping, miscarriages, health problems -president Carter relocated 800 families -Occidental Petroleum company spend $233 million to clean up -now redeveloped with new homes
persistent organic pollutants (POPs):
-DDT, PCBs, dioxins, etc -found in fish and the people who eat them
legislation passed to protect wetlands:
-FL, 1972; NJ, 1998; U.S. gov, Coastal Zone Management Act 1972 -National Wildlife Refuge System; federal gov. purchased wetlands , 10 million acres
resource conservation and recovery act 1976:
-all disposal facilities must be sanctioned by permit -must have safety features including monitoring wells & others -caused most old facilities to shut down (superfund sites) -toxic wastes destined for landfills must be pretreated (including biodegradation or incineration) -"chain of command" or "cradle to grave" tracking
aquarium nitrification and denitrification by bacteria:
-ammonia (NH3) --> nitrite (NO2) --> nitrate (NO3) --> nitrogen gas (N2) -goes from harmful to harmless
clean water act 1972:
-any firm discharged more than an certain volume into natural waterways must have a discharge permit -permits allow tracking -permit renewal contingent on satisfactory performance -exempt: private homes, small firms, farms
leachate:
-as water percolates through soil, it carries with it dissolved trash components -lead based paints, nail polish remover, house supplies, hairspray, mercury thermometers -FL is especially bad
3 major environmental acts today:
-clean air act 1970 -clean water act 1972 -resource conservation and recovery act 1976
wastewater components:
-debris and grit -particulate organic matter -colloidal and dissolved organic material -dissolved inorganic material
methods of land disposal:
-deep well injection -surface impoundments -landfills
asbestos:
-develops over 20-30 years -gradual worsening of breathlessness, productive cough, bluish discoloration, restricted chest expansion -could lead to lung cancer & mesothelioma
negative effects of losing wetlands:
-dusky seaside sparrow became extinct in 1987 -ivory billed woodpecker disappeared in 1940s and was spotted in 2005 -Louisiana black bear is now listed as threatened because of wetlands loss
point-source pollution:
-easy to identify, monitor, and regulate -factories, sewage systems, power plants, underground coal mines, oil wells
2 ways oxygen can be removed from water:
-evaporated -consumed by flounder, shrimp, crabs, bacteria
anthropogenic factors that affect wetlands and watershed:
-filled in and used for agriculture -used for development (build houses, businesses on beaches, roadways, etc.) -dredging to increase navigability (larger ships can get through) -dams -pollution from excess sediment, chemical pollutants, pesticide contamination, & fertilizers -invasion by exotic species
natural factors that affect wetlands and watershed:
-floods -erosion and deposition -drought -volcanic eruptions -fires -wind -global climate change
inland wetlands:
-found along streams, lakes, rivers, and ponds -include bogs, marshes, swamps, river overflow lands
elemental mercury vapor:
-found in dental fillings, thermometers, batteries -hazardous only when inhaled (if swallowed, excreted in a few days) -easily passes through blood-brain barrier and transplacentally -symptoms: hypersalivation, myalgia (muscle pain), insomnia, irritability
phytoplankton:
-grow as single cells or in clumps -live suspended in water or floating on the surface -can literally turn water pea-soup green
organic matter:
-human and animal wastes -leaves, grass, trash, etc -most (except plastic) is biodegradable -bacteria and detritus feeders consume organic matter and oxygen
Louisiana has ___ smaller watersheds:
12
bottle nose dolphins can swim up to __ miles per day
15
municipal solid wastes in pounds per person/day in 1960 vs. 2013:
2.7 lbs to 4.4 lbs
bottle nose dolphin diet:
20 lbs/day of finfish, squid, jellyfish, & shrimp
in the continental 48 states, wetlands once covered ___ million acres, but today only cover 100 million
220
a BOD value for raw sewage:
220 ppm
total municipal solid wastes per year:
236 million tons
now, ___% of wetlands are protected
25
the Bonne Carre Spillway (freshwater division) stream flow rate:
250,000
lead has an initial half life of ___ days
36
___% of species listed as endangered or threatened, rely on wetlands
45
soil particles, sand, and other mineral matter eroded from land and carried in waters:
sediment
the largest swamp in the world:
Atchafalaya Swamp
when the Mississippi river flooded in 2011, the ___ was opened to divert the extra river water into Lake Pontchartrain
Bonnet Carre Spillway
T or F: a marsh can only be freshwater:
F: can be fresh or salt water
the ____ led to the comprehensive environmental response compensation and liability act of 1980, also known as superfund
Love Canal
in 1969, ___ river caught fire, burning 7 bridges due to waterways becoming open chemical and waste sewers
Ohio's Cuyahoga River
chemically inert, nonflammable fluid with high plasticizing ability, and a high dielectric constant:
PCBs
toxic substances:
PCBs dioxins asbestos lead mercury
____ is the predominant species of BT the gulf of mexico fish, Calcasieu Lake is highest & Galveston Bay is lowest
TBT
dolphins were dying mostly of infections because the dolphins were exposed to ___
TBT
___ is made of recycled plastic grocery bags, reclaimed pallet wrap, and waste wood
Trex
in 1974, scientists found that the water and sediments in the gulf no longer contained oxygen, making it a ___ zone
hypoxic
in the Kannan study of bottle nose dolphins, BT concentrations ___ as body length increased
increased
lead may enter the body through __ & __, while organic lead may also be absorbed through the skin
inhalation ingestion
heavy metals, acids from mine drainage or precipitation, road salts used to met ice or snow:
inorganic chemicals
high-density polyethylene plastic (HDPE):
irrigation drainage tiles, sheet plastic, recycling bins
in the Kannan study of bottle nose dolphins the __ contained higher TBT concentrations than the muscles
kidneys
hazmat are treated to stabilize and neutralize and are deposited in landfills in drums:
landfills
In North America, lead has been used in agriculture in the form of ____ for pesticide use, as solder in pipes, as solder in food containers, and an antiknock compound in gasoline
lead arsenate
wetland diversions bypass restrictions created by ___
levees
inorganic materials that essential for plants:
nutrients
petroleum, pesticides, industrial chemicals, cleaning solvents, detergents:
organic chemicals
companies stored barrels on site and simply went out of business, leaving the barrels behind:
orphan sites
excess nitrogen leads to ___ depletion. (deadzone)
oxygen
in the 1970s, both federal regulatory and legislative efforts were begun to reduce lead hazards including limitation of lead in __ & ___
paint gasoline
after 4-6 weeks of sludge treatment, what remains are __,__ biosolids (sludgecake=fertilizer)
pathogen-free, nutrient-rich
__ are among the most serious water pollutants:
pathogens
disease carrying bacteria, viruses, and parasites found in human and animal excrement:
pathogens
4 types of water pollution:
pathogens organic wastes chemical pollutants nutrients
the 2 most important nutrients: (limiting factors if they are in short supply)
phosphorus & nitrogen
nutrient enrichment stimulates ___ growth
phytoplankton
abundant nitrogen promotes growth of ___
phytoplankton (photosynthetic microorganisms)
2 sources of water pollution:
point nonpoint
untreated or poorly treated sewage outfalls particularly in developing countries:
point sources
nutrients become ___ when they stimulate undesirable plant growth in water
pollutants
wetlands absorbs nitrogen and phosphorus, thus reducing ___
pollution
bogs are usually fed by ___, rather than by runoff, groundwater, or streams and are low in nutrients
rain water
___ is treated to remove debris, clarify, purify, and disinfect
raw sewage
the level below which there are no ill effects, but above which there are ill effects:
threshold
the study of the harmful effects of chemicals on human and environmental health:
toxicology
in the US from 1929 to 1977, PCBs were used in ___, capacitors, hydraulic and heat transfer fluids, and solvents in adhesives and sealants (banned in 1979)
transformers
a marsh acts as a ___ region between land and water
transitional
the mississippi river is fed by ___ in 31 of 48 contiguous states
tributaries
___ lowers immune response in dolphins and other aquatic animals
tributyltin (TBT)
___ filters, similar to biological filters in aquaria, consist of a 6 foot layer of rocks with bacteria adhering to them:
trickling
phytoplankton growth makes water ___, which shades out SAV
turbid
___ water decreases photosynthesis and the depth at which SAV can survive
turbid (cloudy)
famous orphan site:
valley of the drums
susceptibility to or likelihood of being exposed to a hazard:
vulnerability
fecal indicators:
water is filtered, and the filter is incubated to allow fecal indicator bacteria to grow (colorimetrically)
the presence of a substance in the environment that, because of its chemical composition or quantity, prevents the functioning of natural processes and produces undesirable environmental and health effects:
water pollution
the area of land ONLY where all of the water that is on it or drains off of it goes into the same place:
watershed
TBT likely (indirectly) led to death of the stranded bottle nose dolphins found along FL coast in the Kannan study because TBT ___
weakens the immune system
___ destruction has slowed over the past few decades, and even reversed
wetland
a land area along freshwater (inland) or salt water (coastal) in which the soils are typically saturated with water all or part of the year:
wetland