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Point and Non-point pollution. 8.E.1 Understand the hydrosphere and the impact of humans on local systems and the effects of the hydrosphere on humans. . 8.E.1.4 Conclude that the good health of humans requires: Monitoring of the hydrosphere Water quality standards
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8.E.1 Understand the hydrosphere and the impact of humans on local systems and the effects of the hydrosphere on humans.
8.E.1.4 • Conclude that the good health of humans requires: • Monitoring of the hydrosphere Water quality standards Methods of water treatment Maintaining safe water quality Stewardship
8.E.1.3 Predict the safety and potability of water supplies in North Carolina based on physical and biological factors, including: • Temperature • Dissolved oxygen • pH • Nitrates and phosphates • Turbidity • Bio-indicators
Desired Outcomes • To learn about factors affecting a watershed. • To begin conversation about how to protect watersheds (urban stewardship).
Water Pollution • What do you think of when you hear these words?
Watershed • A region or area that may contain several rivers, streams, or lakes that ultimately drain into a particular watercourse or body of water.
Waterbody • Receives runoff from a watershed • Lake, river, stream, ocean, pond, or basin
Everyone lives in a watershed • Drain rainfall and melting snow to the nearest waterbody that lies at the lowest point in the watershed • Can be small or large • Are mostly interconnected • Eventually drain into bays, gulfs, or oceans
Water cycle • Water is cycled continuously through our environment • Evaporates, is cycled back through precipitation
Water Pollution • 2 types • A. Point Source- flows from pipes or comes from specific points • Industrial plant • Sewage treatment plant • Storm drains
B. Non-point source pollution • Generally results from land runoff, drainage or seepage, after a rain event • Fertilizers, pesticides • Oils, grease • Trash • All from yards, fields, and roads to the nearest waterbody
Runoff • Can contain pollution that may be damaging • Nutrients • Toxins • Bacteria • Soil • Can degrade our water quality
Water Quality Measures • Temperature – lower temp = more dissolved oxygen = better quality for living things • pH in the neutral range of 7 or near • Nitrates – increase from waste; bad • Bio-indicators – live in specific range of conditions – if present; good quality
Turbidity • Creates a cloudy effect • Plants don’t get enough sunlight • Oxygen is depleted
Home activities that cause pollution • Improper use and disposal of household chemicals, oils, cleaning solutions • Excessive use of water • Failure to maintain septic systems • Abandoned wells • Pet wastes
Best Management Practices • Timber • Plant terrain heavily with vegetation • Cut timber selectively • Put temporary hay bales in place until vegetation grows
BMP - Farm • Berm – prevents soil from entering the waterbody • Wetland – filters out sediment – natural filtration system • Contour plowing • Conservation tilling • Vegetative filter strips
Cover crops • Use pesticides and fertilizers appropriately • Rotate crops
BPM – driveways and highways • Prevent oil leakage • Use dropcloth when changing the oil in your car • Recycle used oil
BMP – Cows and domestic animals • Use manure container • Don’t overapply manure to fields • Increase nitrates
BMP – Lawns and golf courses • Use fertilizers and pesticides sparingly • Don’t use a grass catcher on your lawn • Grass clipping decompose and make a natural fertilizer
Have soil tested – control pH • Never dump grass into waterway • Don’t fertilize if heavy rain is predicted • Don’t mow grass too short • Choose plants suited for your area • Don’t dispose of clippings or leaves down storm drains
BMP - household • Be a smart shopper • Buy biodegradable, recyclable products; multipurpose products; non-aerosol sprays • Reduce contaminants
Use chemicals properly • Dispose of chemicals properly • Clean up after pets • Use less water • Maintain your septic tank properly
Plant groundcover • Don’t litter
Double Bubble • Point non-Point