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Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

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Determinants of Water Quality
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Page 1: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Determinants of Water Quality

Page 2: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

1) Biological

2) Physical

3) Chemical

Basic Types of Pollution

Page 3: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Develops from microorganisms and their activities.

Biological Water Pollution

Page 4: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Physical Pollutants

Heat½ of water withdrawn in the U.S.

Thermal Shock to organismsReduction in O2 content.

Sediment

Turbidity limits light penetrationParticles carry contaminants

Page 5: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Chemical Pollutants

NutrientsPesticides

MetalsSalts

Synthetic Organics

Page 6: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Two Basic Avenues of Water Pollution

Point source pollution Specific entry pointIndustrial dischargesSewage treatment plantsLandfills

Non-point source pollution

Diffuse sourcesDifficult to trace, regulateAgriculture, Urban Runoff

Page 7: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Point and Non-Point Pollution

Example

Page 8: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Superior

Michigan

Erie

OntarioHuron

Page 9: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Shallowest of the Great Lakesaverage depth = 62 feet

agriculture

Largest population density of Great Lakes

Detroit

Cleveland

Buffalo

Page 10: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Heavy Metals

Point and Non-Point Source Pollution

Industrial Chemicals

Petroleum

Nutrients

Pesticides

Page 11: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Non-point Source Pollution

Blue-green algaephytoplankton

Nitrogen and Phosphorus

Agriculture, Wastewater Discharge, Urban Runoff

Stimulation of Primary Productivity

Page 12: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Point Sources

lip papillomas

PetroleumOrganic ChemicalsHeavy MetalsPesticides

Page 13: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Cuyahoga River Fire (1969)

Petrochemicals

Page 14: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Clean Water Act: 1972

Page 15: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Determining Water Quality

Page 16: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Major Determinants of Water Qualityand the Impact or Availability of Water Pollutants

OrganismsSolubilityOxygen

pH

Page 17: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Microorganisms

Pathogenic – harmful

Non-pathogenic - benign

Determinants of Water Quality

Page 18: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Autotrophic: produce complex organic compounds from simple inorganic molecules and an external source of energy.

The Earliest Organisms

Chemoautotrophs, Cyanobacteria, Plants

Organic = Carbon-containing

Page 19: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Autotrophs – Plants, Algae, Cyanobacteria

Produce complex organic compounds fromcarbon dioxide using energy from light.

6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2

light

simple inorganic molecule complex organic compound

energy

Primary producers – base of the food chain

Page 20: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Heterotrophic Organisms

Page 21: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Heterotrophs

Derive energy from consumption of complex organic compounds produced by autotrophs

Autotrophs store energy from the sun in carbon compounds (C6H12O6)

Heterotrophs consume these complex carbon compounds for energy

carbon compounds (C6H12O6)

autotrophs Heterotrophs

ConsumersProducers

Page 22: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Heterotrophic Organisms

Two Basic Types Related to Oxygen Status

Anaerobic

low-oxygen environments

Anaerobic heterotrophs

Aerobic

high oxygen environments

Aerobic heterotrophs

Page 23: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Autotrophs store energy from the sun in carbon compounds (C6H12O6)

Heterotrophs consume these complex carbon compounds for energy

There are two types of heterotrophic organisms: aerobic and anaerobic

Aerobic: high oxygen environments, Anaerobic: low oxygen environments

Summary

Page 24: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Extra Credit:

2. ________consume complex carbon compounds for energy

1. Organisms that live in high oxygen environments are ____

3. Organisms that are directly harmful to health are called ___

4. Organisms that produce complex organic compounds from simple inorganic molecules and an external source of energy are called ______________________________

Page 25: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Aerobic Heterotrophs and Anaerobic Heterotrophs

Heterotrophic Organisms

Page 26: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Aerobic Heterotrophic Organisms

Page 27: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Aerobic Heterotrophs

Obtain the energy stored in complex organiccompounds by combining them with oxygen

C6H12O6 + Oxygen = energy

Live in high-oxygen environmentsConsume organic compounds for energy

Page 28: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O

Aerobic Respiration

+ energy

organisms

Page 29: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O

Electron poor

Electron rich Electron poor

Electron rich

The energy is obtained by exchanging electrons between carbon and oxygen.

2880 kJ of energy is produced

Aerobic respiration is very efficient, yielding high amounts of energy

Page 30: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Anaerobic Heterotrophic Organisms

Page 31: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Anaerobic Heterotrophic Organisms

Can use energy stored in complex carbon compounds in the absence of free oxygen

The energy is obtained by exchangingelectrons with elements other than oxygen.

Nitrogen (NO3-)

Sulfur (SO42-)

Iron (Fe3+)

Live in low-oxygen environmentsConsume organic compounds for energy

Page 32: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

C6H12O6 + 3NO3- + 3H2O = 6HCO3

- + 3NH4+

Anaerobic respiration

C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O

Electron poor

Electron rich Electron poor

Electron rich

Aerobic Respiration

Electron rich

Electron poor

Electron poor

Electron rich

Page 33: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Becoming Anaerobic

Page 34: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

The oxygen status of water determines and is determined by the type of organisms

aerobic or anaerobic

High-oxygen Low-oxygen

Oxygen status also impacts availability and toxicity of some pollutants

Page 35: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Solubility: 0.043 g/L(20oC)

Oxygen is Water Soluble

O2

O2

Page 36: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Diffusion of O2 through the water andfrom the atmosphere into water is generally slow

Oxygen enters water from the atmosphereand from aquatic photosynthetic organisms

Oxygen

Page 37: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Diffusion of O2 in water is generally slow

Heterotrophic organisms together with inputs of organic materials (food sources) control the oxygen status of waters.

C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O

Accelerated metabolic activity of aerobic heterotrophsdue to an abundance of organic materials (food source)can significantly reduce the amount of dissolved oxygen

Lower dissolved oxygen levels impact species diversityincluding a shift to a dominance of anaerobic microorganisms

Page 38: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Reduced Oxygen Levels

Oxygen is being used by aerobic heterotrophsat rate faster than it can be replaced

Oxygen

Slow diffusion

Page 39: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

SO4-2 HS-

O2

NO3-

SO4-2

Respiration and Still Ponds

C6H12O6 + 3SO42- + 3H+ = 6HCO3

- + 3HS-

Heterotrophic Organisms

oxygen

Aerobic heterotrophsconsume oxygen

Anaerobic heterotrophsUse nitrate instead of O2

Anaerobic heterotrophsUse sulfate instead of O2

Page 40: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

C6H12O6 + 3NO3- + 3H2O = 6HCO3

- + 3NH4+ 1796 kJ

C6H12O6 + 3SO42- + 3H+ = 6HCO3

- + 3HS- 453 kJ

C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O 2880 kJ

Anaerobic respiration also is less efficient andproduces less energy than aerobic respiration

Page 41: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Carboniferous Period

About 350 million years ago

First land plants: 480 mya.

Primitive bark-bearing trees (lignin)

Anaerobic respiration is less efficient, slower, andproduces less energy than aerobic respiration

anaerobic

Page 42: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

End of lecture 22

Page 43: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Solubility

The ease with which substances dissolve in water

Page 44: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

NaCl Na+ + Cl-Na+

Sodium Chloride is extremely soluble in water

Page 45: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

The solubility of other ionic salts varies

KCl solubleCaCO3 somewhat solubleHgCl2 solublePbCO3 poorly solubleFePO4 poorly soluble

The degree to which contaminants can existin water is often determined by their solubility

Solubility also can be influenced strongly by factors such as pH and oxygen content

Page 46: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Many toxic organic pollutants includingpesticides, and industrial productsare extremely insoluble in water.

DDTDioxinsPCBs

Ironically their insolubility in water is partly responsibleFor their persistence in the environment.

Page 47: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Oxygen is also water SolubleIn natural systems, oxygen diffusing from the atmosphere

and from plant photosynthesis dissolves in water

Diffusion of O2 from the atmosphere is generally slow

Oxygen

Slow diffusion

Page 48: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Temperature and Oxygen

The solubility of oxygen in water is highly temperature dependent.

Saturated Oxygen Content

10.1 mg/L 8.3 mg/L

15oC 25oC

Affects species diversity

Page 49: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Cold water species: 5-6 mg/L TroutCool water species: 4 mg/L PikeWarm water species: 2-3 mg/L Bass, Catfish, Bluegill

Fish Species

Minimum Oxygen Tolerances

Page 50: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Warm WaterHigh biotic activityHigh demand on oxygenDecreased oxygen content

Slow diffusion of oxygen

Oxygen contents can affect the form, solubility, or toxicity of important contaminants

Heat also increases Biological activity

Page 51: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Oxygen

Oxygen is water soluble, but its solubility is temperature-dependent.In the atmosphere, about one out of 5 molecules is oxygen; in water, about one out of every 100,000 molecules is oxygen.

Oxygen enters the water body from the atmosphere (slowly)and from photosynthesis near the surface

Oxygen leaves the water column principally by organism respiration.

Higher temperatures increase biotic activity, decreasing oxygen

Higher temperatures decrease the ability of water to hold or contain O2.

Oxygen status affects microbial populations and other species diversityas well as the availability or toxicity of important water contaminants.

Page 52: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

pH

Page 53: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

pH (hydrogen)

H+ ion

Ions are stable forms of elements that result from gaining or losing electrons in chemical reactions

Cations have lost electrons and are positively charged

Anions have gained electrons and are negatively charged

H+, Na+, K+, Ca2+, NH4+, Mg+2

Cl-, F-, NO3-, CO3

2-, SO42-

Elements have equal numbers of protons (+) and electrons (-)

Page 54: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

pH is based on the abundance of hydrogen ions in water

When elemental hydrogen loses its electronit becomes a positively charged ion.

Nucleus1 Proton (+)

1 Electron (-)

Hydrogen ions participate in enormousnumbers of environmental reactions

Page 55: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Common Acids

Hydrochloric Acid HClSulfuric Acid H2SO4

Nitric Acid HNO3

Carbonic Acid H2CO3

Acetic Acid HC2H3O2

Ammonium NH4+

Page 56: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

HCl H+ + Cl-

HNO3 H+ + NO3-

H2SO4 H+ + HSO4-

Dissociation of acids

Page 57: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

pH

A measure of the amount of Hydrogen ions in water

- Log (H+)

Low pH = High amount of Hydrogen ions in waterHigh pH = Low amount of Hydrogen ions in water

Low pH: acidic

Page 58: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

pH (hydrogen)

Low pH = High H+

H+

pH 2 = 0.01 g H+/ LpH 4 = 0.0001 g H+/ L

Acid: any substance whichincreases the hydrogen ionconcentration in water.

- Log (H+)

Natural rainfall has a pH of 5.6

There is 100 times more H+ in water at pH 2 compared to pH 4

Page 59: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

CaHPO4 + H+ = Ca2+ + H2PO4-

Availability and Form of Nutrients

NH4+ NH3

Low pH High pHHigh H+ conc. low H+ conc.

Solid(unavailable)

Dissolved (available)

Page 60: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Solid(unavailable)

dissolved(available)

Availability and Form of Metals

Dissolution of metals increases their mobility

PbCO3 + H+ Pb2+ + HCO3-

Page 61: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

There are approximately 420,000 abandoned mines in the states of California, Arizona and Nevada

Mine Tailings

FeS2 2H2SO4

oxygen

water

Direct toxicity plus dissolution of associated metal contaminants such as arsenic, lead, and cadmium

Cd, Pb, Zn,Cr, Cu, Al

PbCO3 + H+ Pb2+ + HCO3-

solid soluble

2H+ + SO42-

Page 62: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

pH and Acid Rainfall

Page 63: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Natural rainfall is acidic: pH 5.6

CO2 + H2O = H2CO3

H2CO3 => H+ + HCO3-

Acid

Pollution by sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxidescontributes additional acidity to rainfall.

SO2 + H2O → H2SO4

Page 64: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

The Canadian government has estimated that 14,000 lakes in eastern Canada are acidic.

National Surface Water Survey (EPA)

Investigated the effects of acidic deposition in over 1,000 lakes

Acid rain caused acidity in 75 percent of the acidiclakes and about 50 percent of the acidic streams

Adirondacks and Catskill Mountains mid-Appalachian highlands

Little Echo Pond has a pH of 4.2.

Most lakes and streams have a pH between 6 and 8.In the Northeast U.S. many lakes have pH less than 5.

Page 65: Determinants of Water Quality. 1) Biological 2) Physical 3) Chemical Basic Types of Pollution.

Acid tolerances

Increasing acidityfood

As acid rain flows through soils in a watershed, aluminum is released

Low pH can be directly toxic to fish and other species

Low pH and increased aluminum levels cause chronic stress thatmay not kill individual fish, but leads to lower body weight and

smaller size and makes fish less able to compete for food and habitat.

At pH 5, most fish eggs cannot hatch


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