Water Pollution, Causes and Effects
Water Pollution, Causes and Effects
Water Pollution, Causes and Effects
Jharana Khurd village, 20 km from Jaipur, Rajsthan, there are no youth. All the 1,200 inhabitants, irrespective their age, look old. There shoulders, hips and ankles are swollen and ache all the time. All have cracked teeth. The story is similar in other village in many states of India. Fluorosis, caused by an excess of fluoride in water. Fluorosis is most severe and widespread in India and China
Dental fluorosis results in blackened, mottled, or cracked teeth. Skeletal fluorosis means permanent and severe bone and joint deformities. Non-skeletal fluorosis leads to gastro-intestinal and neurological problems. The Indian geology is such that the bedrock contains minerals with high fluoride content. When the bedrock weathers, the fluoride leaches into the water and soil. Normally, the disease dose not lead death, but to extreme suffering. It neither allow a person to live nor to die.
Excessive extraction of groundwater has led to deeper and deeper borewells, which draw water from aquifers containing high fluoride concentrations. There is no fluoride problem if one drinks water from an open well or pond. Technologies are available for defluoridation, but the plants are expensive and involve significant maintenance costs.
Water pollution is the contamination of water bodies (e.g. lakes, rivers, oceans, aquifers and groundwater). Water pollution occurs when pollutants are discharged directly or indirectly into water bodies without adequate treatment to remove harmful compounds
Odour
Taste Total dissolved solids, mg/l, max. Total hardness (as CaCO3), mg/l, max. Calcium hardness (as CaCO3), mg/l, max. Magnesium hardness (as CaCO3), mg/l, max. Copper (as Cu), mg/l, max. Iron (as Fe), mg/l, max. Manganese (as Mn), mg/l, max. Cholorides (as Cu), mg/l, max. Sulphates (as SO4), mg/l, max.
Un-objectionable
Tasteless 500 200 200 200 1.5 0.3 0.5 250 400 1,500 1.5 0.5 600 400
Water pollutant
Bacteria,Viruses,Protozoa, Parasitic worms Oxygen demanding substances Inorganic plant nutrients Organic chemicals Sediment or suspended matter Thermal pollution Radioactive substances
Water Pollutants
Sediments: Excessive amounts of soil particles carried by flowing water, when there is severe soil erosion. Oxygen-demanding wastes: Organic waste such as animal manure and plant debris that are decomposed by bacteria, from sewage, animal feedlots, paper mills, and food processing facilities. Infectious microorganisms: Parasitic worms, viruses and bacteria from infected organisms as well as human and animal wastes.
Organic compounds: Synthetic chemicals containing carbon from industrial effluents, surface runoff, and cleaning agents. Inorganic nutrients: Substances like nitrogen and phosphorus from animal waste, plant residues, and fertilizer runoff. Inorganic chemicals: Acids, salts, and heavy metals like lead and mercury from industrial effluents, surface runoff, and household cleaning agents.
Radioactive substances: Wastes from nuclear power plants, nuclear weapons production, mining and refining uranium and other ores. Thermal pollution: Hot water from industrial processes.
Point source pollution also known as the end of the pipe pollution can be traced to a specific source, such as a leaking chemical tank, effluents coming from a waste treatment or industrial plant, or a manure spill from a hog confinement lagoon.
Non-point source pollution refers to pollutants that come from a widespread area and cannot be tracked to a single point or source. Soil erosion, chemical runoff, and
Arsenic Poisoning
Arsenic contamination of ground water was first reported in 1983 from 24-parganas district of West Bengal. Later it was found that almost the whole Bangladesh was affected by this problem. The skin develops spots, then hard nodules, leading later to cancer.
Eutrophication (cont..)
When the excessive number of algae die, they fall to the bottom of the lake and get decomposed. Since the process used up a lot of the dissolved oxygen, some fish species die. They are replaced by other species that can tolerate lesser amounts of oxygen.
What is biomagnification ?
Biomagnification is the increase in concentration of a substance, such as the pesticide, that occurs in a food chain. The pollutant enters the first organism in a food chain. When the second organism in the chain consumes the first one, the pollutant too moves into the second organism. As we go up the levels of the ecological pyramid, there is energy loss. Hence, at each succeeding level, the predator consumes more of the prey. As a result, the organisms at higher levels have greater concentrations
Biological Magnification
Water 0.000002 ppm Herring gull 124 ppm Phytoplankton 0.0025 ppm
Water Pollution
Large amount of pesticide used in agriculture and other sectors have contaminated many water sources. This is also the case with soft drinks. Today bottles and pouches of water are found every where. They contain deadly pesticides like lindane, DDT, and malathion, and amounts were well above the norms.
Proper Treatment of waste water to reduce the toxicity Non-biodegradable waste should not be in dumped water bodies Human activities on water bodies should be completely stopped The use of fertilizers and pesticides should be minimized Fertilize garden and yard plants with manure or compost instead of commercial inorganic fertilizer
What Can You Do? Water Pollution Fertilize garden and yard plants with manure or compost instead of commercial inorganic fertilizer. Minimize your use of pesticides. Do not apply fertilizer or pesticides near a body of water. Grow or buy organic foods. Do not drink bottled water unless tests show that your tap water is contaminated. Merely refill and reuse plastic bottles with tap water. Compost your food wastes. Do not use water fresheners in toilets. Do not flush unwanted medicines down the toilet. Do not pour pesticides, paints, solvents, oil, antifreeze, or other products containing harmful chemicals down the drain or onto the ground.