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Topic 5 – Pollution Management Topic 5.1 – Nature of Pollution

Topic 5 – Pollution Management

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Topic 5 – Pollution Management. Topic 5.1 – Nature of Pollution. Pollution. The contamination of the Earth and atmosphere to such an extent that normal environmental processes are adversely affected. Can be natural/human caused Can be deliberate/accidental. Pollution. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Topic 5 – Pollution Management

Topic 5 – Pollution ManagementTopic 5.1 – Nature of Pollution

Page 2: Topic 5 – Pollution Management

PollutionThe contamination of the Earth and atmosphere to such an extent that normal environmental processes are adversely affected.Can be natural/human causedCan be deliberate/accidental

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PollutionCan be matter (solid, liquid, gas) or energy (noise, light, heat)

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Major Pollution Sources: Combustion of Fossil

FuelsCarbon DioxideGreenhouse gas

Sulfur DioxideAcid deposition (tree/fish death)

Photochemical SmogRespiratory problems

Carbon MonoxideBinds hemoglobin, can cause death

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Major Pollution Sources: Domestic Waste

Organic Waste (food/sewage)

EutrophicationFills landfills

Waste Paper/Plastics/Glass/Metals

Fills landfillsReduces natural resources Energy used to produce causes pollution

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Major Pollution Sources: Industrial Waste

Heavy MetalsPoisoning

FluoridesPoisoning

HeatReduces dissolved oxygen

LeadDisabilities in children

AcidsCorrosive

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Major Pollution Sources: Agricultural Waste

NitratesEutrophication

Organic WasteEutrophication

PesticidesAccumulate up food chains

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Point Source PollutionPollution released from a single, identifiable source.Examples:

A factory smokestack or exhaust pipeA sewage pipeA specific incidentA very bright light

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Non-point Source Pollution

Release of pollutants from dispersed originsExamples:

Agricultural runoffVehicle exhaustUrban runoff

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Topic 5 – Pollution ManagementTopic 5.2 – Detection and Monitoring of Pollution

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Pollution MonitoringBiochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD)

A measure of the amount of oxygen required by micro-organisms to break down the organic material in water

Source of Pollutant BOD (mg DO)

Unpolluted River 0-5

Treated Sewage 20-60

Raw Sewage 350

Cattle Manure 10,000

Paper Pulp Mill 25,000

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Pollution MonitoringIndicator Species

Organisms that show something about the environment by their presence, absence, or abundance.

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Topic 5 – Pollution ManagementTopic 5.3 – Approaches to Pollution Management

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Pollution Management Srategies

Replace-Regulate-Restore

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Pollution Management Strategies

ReplaceDevelop alternate technologiesAdopt alternate lifestyles

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Pollution Management Strategies

RegulateSetting and imposing standardsIntroducing measures for extracting the pollutant from waste

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Pollution Management Strategies

RestoreExtracting and removing pollutant from ecosystemReplanting and restocking with plant/animal populations

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Topic 5 – Pollution ManagementTopic 5.4 - Eutrophication

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EutrophicationThe addition of excess nutrients to a water ecosystem, causing algae to bloomUsually nitrates and phosphates

DetergentsFertilizersLivestock drainageSewage

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Eutrophication Process1. Fertilizers wash into

lake2. Algae bloom, light to

plants decreases, plants die

3. More algae=more zooplankton=more small fish

4. Algae die and are decomposed by bacteria, oxygen level goes down, everything dies

5. Turbidity increases

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Eutrophication Management

ReplaceStop/change fertilizers/wastePlant buffer zones

RegulateLimit pollutants

RestorePump air through lakeDredge lake bottomRemove algae physically or by algicidesReintroduce species

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Topic 5 – Pollution ManagementTopic 5.5 – Solid Domestic Waste

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Types of Solid Domestic Waste

Garden Waste/Kitchen WasteGlass, wood, metal, plasticsPaperTextilesDiapers

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Solutions to WasteLandfill

Compost

Recycle (or Reuse)

Incineration

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Topic 5 – Pollution ManagementTopic 5.6 – Depletion of Stratospheric Ozone

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Atmosphere StructureMain Components:

Nitrogen (78%)Oxygen (20%)Argon (1%)CO2 (.038%)

Temperature and pressure vary with altitude

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Ozone LayerOzone (O3) is more concentrated in the low stratosphere (12-20mi)O3 absorbs UV radiation in a process that converts O2to O3 and back

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UV Radiation (UV-B)Causes eye damage, cataracts, sunburn, and skin cancer in humans (and some animals)Can damage plants and phytoplankton

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Ozone Depleting Substances

CFCsRefrigerants1987 Montreal Protocol called for a sharp reduction in CFCs and other Ozone Depleting Substances