330 likes | 1.59k Views
Eutrophication in Water bodies. By: Kelly Toy. Overview. What is Eutrophication Eutrophication management Experiments Nitrogen or Phosphorus control Debate Case Study: Baltic Sea Recommendations. 1. What is Eutrophication?. Definition Sources Process Importance.
E N D
Eutrophication in Water bodies By: Kelly Toy
Overview • What is Eutrophication • Eutrophication management Experiments • Nitrogen or Phosphorus control Debate • Case Study: Baltic Sea • Recommendations
1. What is Eutrophication? Definition Sources Process Importance
Definition - Eutrophication • Degradation of water bodies from overfertilization of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), resulting in excess plant biomass and consequently oxygen and habitat depletion. Removing microalgal blooms at the Olympic Sailing Venue, China. Seagrasses covered with attached algae in a Danish estuary.
Excess N and P from Human Activities • N and P enters water through • Runoff • Wastewater treatment and industrial discharges • Agriculture • Excess fertilizers, manure • Combustion of fossil fuels • N in air acid rain water
Why does Eutrophication matter? • Global expansion of dead zones • oxygen depleted areas where fish and wildlife are extinct • Decreased biodiversity • New species invasion • Toxic algal blooms (some cyanobacteria) • Aesthetically unpleasing • Severe impacts on fisheries • Economic detriment industries relying on water quality/ aquatic ecosystems (tourism)
2. Eutrophication Management Experiments 1970’s Schindler Experiment Response Effects on Lakes and Estuaries
1970’s experimentation37-years long with entire-ecosystem lakes D.W. Schindler found: • P controls phytoplankton • Reducing N increased cyanobacteria Response: • U.S. and Europe ban P in detergents • Ramp up P removal in wastewater treatment plants Only N inputs N + P inputs Experimental Lake 226 Ontario, Canada
Effect on Lakes and Estuaries • Water quality in lakes improved dramatically • Eutrophication in estuaries increased • N pollution grew tremendously since the 1970’s • N contributes to eutrophication in estuaries • (no N-fixing cyanobacteria, N can limit growth) • Definitons • Lake- Freshwater surrounded by land • Estuary- Freshwater inlet connects to ocean outlet • Salinity varies throughout water body
Dead Zones in Estuaries • 146 coastal regions affected by anoxia • Eliminating fish and bottom-feeding life forms • Size of dead zones growing • Gulf of Mexico dead zone- state of New Jersey
3. N or P Control Debate Evidence for each side
Debate: N or P control? • Reducing P increased eutrophication in estuaries • Reducing N increased N-fixing cyanobacteria • Expert Liminologists are still debating which nutrient controls eutrophication • cannot perform Schindler experiments in estuaries • Each water body is condition specific • Region and environment/ecosystem
4. Case Study: Baltic Sea Description High Societal Stakes Recommendations
Case Study: Baltic Sea • 9 countries bordering • Low salinity estuary • N-fixers abundant • Spatial extent and intensity of Hypoxia (low O2) growing
Dual Nutrient reduction strategy • Abatement plan was signed by all Baltic Sea countries in 2007 cost $4 billion/year • Upgrade P urban sewage treatment • decrease eutrophication to levels in 1900-1920
High Societal Stakes $$ • Swedish Department of Agriculture calculates N reductions in the plan cannot be fulfilled unless a large part of Swedish agriculture is shut down • Damaging aquatic ecosystem • Economic detriment to fishing and water industries • Many Countries input • Many Countries affected
5. Recommendations Results should be well tested Expensive Other ways to mitigate Eutrophication
Recommendation • All beneficial effects of dual N and P control must be robustly predicted before implementing high cost of nutrient reductions • N abatement is a very expensive pilot study • May favor cyanobacteria instead of water quality • Do not install N removal technologies at ww treatment plant yet • Continue P reductions to reduce sedimentation • Reduce both N + P at the source
In the meantime We can reduce N and P inputs without expensive treatment Control Measures for Runoff of both N and P: • Decreased use of fertilizers • Containment and treatment of manure • Tillage practices that conserve soil • Vegetative buffers along shoreline • Maintenance and restoration of wetlands • Convert croplands sensitive to erosion to other uses that do not pollute waterways • Eating less meat – fewer fertilizers needed to grow grain for livestock and less manure
Conclusion Eutrophication is destroying aquatic ecosystems Experiments and Observations How do we manage N and P? Expensive Societal effects on Countries
References • Carpenter, S.R. Phosphorus control is critical to mitigating eutrophication. PNAS2008, 105, 11039-11040. • Conley, D.J. et al. Hypoxia-Related Processes in the Baltic Sea. Environmental Science and Technology2009, 43, 3412-3420. • Schindler, D.W. et al. Eutrophication of lakes cannot be controlled by reducing nitrogen input: Results of a 37-year whole-ecosystem experiment. PNAS2008, 105, 11254-11258. • Lewis, W.M.; Wurtsbaugh, W.A. Control of Lacustrine Phytoplankton by Nutrients: Erosion of the Phosphorus Paradigm. International Review Hydrobiology2008, 93, 446-465. • Conley, D.J. et al. Controlling Eutrophication: Nitrogen and Phosphorus. Science2009, 323, 1014-1015. • Howarth, R.; Paerl, H.W. Coastal marine eutrophication: Control of both nitrogen and phosphorus is necessary. PNAS2008, 105, E103. • Schindler, D.W.; Hecky, R.E. Reply to Howarth and Paerl: Is control of both nitrogen and phosphorus necessary? PNAS2008, 105, E104. • Schindler, D.W.; Hecky, R.E. Eutrophication: More Nitrogen Data Needed. Science2009, 324, 721-722. • Schelske, C.L. Eutrophication: Focus on Phosphorus. Science2009, 324, 722. • Conley, D.J. et al. Response (to Eutrophication Policy Forum Debate). Science2009, 324, 724-725. • Bryhn, A.C.; Hakanson, L. Coastal eutrophication: Whether N and/or P should be abated depends on the dynamic mass balance. PNAS2009, 106, E3 • Schindler, D.W.; Hecky, R.E. Reply to Bryhn and Hakanson: Models for the Baltic agree with our experiments and observations in lakes. PNAS2009, 106, E4. • Bryhn, A.C.; Hakanson, L. Eutrophication: Model Before Acting. Science2009, 324, 723. • Jacoby, C.A.; Frazer, T.K. Eutrophication: Time to Adjust Expectations. Science2009, 324, 723-724.