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Connecticut Water Trails Association |
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Connecticut Water Trails Program Water Trails & Water Pollution Types Of Water Pollution - Oxygen Depleting
Many wastes are biodegradable, that is, they can be broken down
and used as food by microorganisms like bacteria. We tend to think of
biodegradable wastes as being preferable to non-biodegradable ones,
because they will be broken down and not remain in the environment for
very long times. Too much biodegradable material, though, can cause the
serious problem of oxygen depletion in receiving waters.
Like fish, aerobic bacteria that live in water use oxygen gas
which is dissolved in the water when they consume their "food".
(The oxygen in the compound H2O, water, is chemically bound,
and is not available for respiration (breathing)). But, oxygen is
not very soluble in water. Even when the water is saturated with
dissolved oxygen, it contains only about 1/25 the concentration that is
present in air. So if there is too much "food" in the water, the
bacteria that are consuming it can easily use up all of the dissolved
oxygen, leaving none for the fish, which will die of suffocation.
Once the oxygen is gone (depleted), other bacteria that do not need
dissolved oxygen take over. But while aerobic microorganisms--
those which use dissolved oxygen-- convert the nitrogen, sulfur, and
carbon compounds that are present in the wastewater into odorless-- and
relatively harmless-- oxygenated forms like nitrates, sulfates
and carbonates, these anaerobic microorganisms produce toxic and
smelly ammonia, amines, and sulfides, and flammable methane (swamp gas).
Add in the dead fish, and you see why we don't want large amounts of
biodegradable materials entering lakes and streams.
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