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Connecticut Water Trails Association |
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Connecticut Water Trails Program Water Trails & Water Pollution
What Is Water
Pollution?
Water pollution is any chemical, physical or
biological change in the quality of water that has a harmful effect on
any living thing that drinks or uses or lives (in) it. When humans drink
polluted water it often has serious effects on their health. Water
pollution can also make water unsuited for the desired use.
What Are The Major
Water Pollutants?
There are several classes of water pollutants. The
first are disease-causing agents. These are bacteria, viruses, protozoa
and parasitic worms that enter sewage systems and untreated waste.
A second category of water pollutants is
oxygen-demanding wastes; wastes that can be decomposed by
oxygen-requiring bacteria. When large populations of decomposing
bacteria are converting these wastes it can deplete oxygen levels in the
water. This causes other organisms in the water, such as fish, to die.
A third class of water pollutants is water-soluble
inorganic pollutants, such as acids, salts and toxic metals. Large
quantities of these compounds will make water unfit to drink and will
cause the death of aquatic life.
Another class of water pollutants are nutrients;
they are water-soluble nitrates and phosphates that cause excessive
growth of algae and other water plants, which deplete the water's oxygen
supply. This kills fish and, when found in drinking water, can kill
young children.
Water can also be polluted by a number of organic
compounds such as oil, plastics and pesticides, which are harmful to
humans and all plants and animals in the water.
A very dangerous category is suspended sediment,
because it causes depletion in the water's light absorption and the
particles spread dangerous compounds such as pesticides through the
water.
Finally, water-soluble radioactive compounds can
cause cancer, birth defects and genetic damage and are thus very
dangerous water pollutants.
Where Does Water
Pollution Come From?
Water pollution is usually caused by human
activities. Different human sources add to the pollution of water. There
are two sorts of sources, point and nonpoint sources. Point sources
discharge pollutants at specific locations through pipelines or sewers
into the surface water. Nonpoint sources are sources that cannot be
traced to a single site of discharge.
Examples of point sources are: factories, sewage
treatment plants, underground mines, oil wells, oil tankers and
agriculture.
Examples of nonpoint sources are: acid deposition
from the air, traffic, pollutants that are spread through rivers and
pollutants that enter the water through groundwater.
Nonpoint pollution is hard to control because the
perpetrators cannot be traced.
How Do We Detect Water
Pollution?
Water pollution is detected in laboratories, where
small samples of water are analyzed for different contaminants. Living
organisms such as fish can also be used for the detection of water
pollution. Changes in their behavior or growth show us, that the water
they live in is polluted. Specific properties of these organisms can
give information on the sort of pollution in their environment.
Laboratories also use computer models to determine what dangers there
can be in certain waters. They import the data they own on the water
into the computer, and the computer then determines if the water has any
impurities.
What Is Heat
Pollution, What Causes It And What Are The Dangers?
In most manufacturing processes a lot of heat
originates that must be released into the environment, because it is
waste heat. The cheapest way to do this is to withdraw nearby surface
water, pass it through the plant, and return the heated water to the
body of surface water. The heat that is released in the water has
negative effects on all life in the receiving surface water. This is the
kind of pollution that is commonly known as heat pollution or thermal
pollution.
The warmer water decreases the solubility of oxygen
in the water and it also causes water organisms to breathe faster. Many
water organisms will then die from oxygen shortages, or they become more
susceptible to diseases.
What Is Eutrophication,
What Causes It And What Are The Dangers?
Eutrophication means natural nutrient enrichment of
streams and lakes. The enrichment is often increased by human
activities, such as agriculture (manure addition). Over time, lakes then
become eutrophic due to an increase in nutrients.
Eutrophication is mainly caused by an increase in
nitrate and phosphate levels and has a negative influence on water life.
This is because, due to the enrichment, water plants such as algae will
grow extensively. As a result the water will absorb less light and
certain aerobic bacteria will become more active. These bacteria deplete
oxygen levels even further, so that only anaerobic bacteria can be
active. This makes life in the water impossible for fish and other
organisms.
What Is Acid Rain And How Does It
Develop?
Typical rainwater has a pH of about 5 to 6. This
means that it is naturally a neutral, slightly acidic liquid. During
precipitation rainwater dissolves gasses such as carbon dioxide and
oxygen. The industry now emits great amounts of acidifying gasses, such
as sulphuric oxides and carbon monoxide. These gasses also dissolve in
rainwater. This causes a change in pH of the precipitation – the pH of
rain will fall to a value of or below 4. When a substance has a pH of
below 6.5, it is acid. The lower the pH, the more acid the substance is.
That is why rain with a lower pH, due to dissolved industrial emissions,
is called acid rain.
Why Does Water
Sometimes Smell Like Rotten Eggs?
When water is enriched with nutrients, eventually
anaerobic bacteria, which do not need oxygen to practice their
functions, will become highly active. These bacteria produce certain
gasses during their activities. One of these gases is hydrogen sulphide.
This compounds smells like rotten eggs. When water smells like rotten
eggs we can conclude that there is hydrogen present, due to a shortage
of oxygen in the specific water.
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