APES Unit 8
Unit 8.1: Sources of Pollution
Categories of Water Pollution
Point Source
Pollution that enters the environment from a single source and is clearly identified
Source include:
Wastewater treatment plants
Electronic or automobile manufacturers
Paper or pulp mills
Oil refineries
Concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO)
Leaking underground gasoline storage tanks
No point Source
Pollution that can not be traced back to a single point or property, not from a single pipe
Contributions of contaminants come from many sources accumulating over a wide area and eventually reaching a level that impairs water quality
Agricultural and residential areas can have excess chemicals such as:
Fertilizers
Herbicides
Insecticides
Water from rain, snowmelt, and irrigation running off parking lots, roads, lawns in urban/suburban areas can be a source of
Oil
Grease
Toxic chemicals
Sediment - soil particles made of sand, gravel, and clay from improperly managed construction sites, crops and forest lands, and eroding stream banks
One of the most significant non point source pollutants in the US
Categories differentiate the sources of contamination in order to manager them effectively
EPA sets water quality standards, and these classifications help determine protection strategies
Ground and surface waters can be impacted by both point and non point source pollution
Clean Water Act - requires industries of point sources to get a permit form that state and/or EPA before they can discharge any effluent into a body of water
Unit 8.2: Human Impacts on Ecosystems
Coral reefs are important ecosystems
Critical ecosystems in the oceans cover less than 1% of the area but support 25% of marine species
Animals that live symbiotically with algae that photosynthesize
Destructive Fishing Practices
Bottom Trawling scrapes nets along the ocean floor and breaks and crushed coral
Marine Debris like unattended nets, traps, and monofilament fishing line can damage and injurie reefs and reef-dependent organisms like young fish
Overfishing removes fish, especially herbivores, which help maintain healthy algae populations in the reef ecosystem
Cyanide fishing is when sodium cyanide is poured over an area to stun fish so they are easier to catch for the aquarium and restaurant trade, which poisons corals
Sedimentation Threatens Coral
Sedimentation, such as rock, clay, and sand, can bury corals, blocking the sunlight needed by the symbiont so no photosynthesis occurs, again resulting in the death of the coral
Rangle of Tolerance - based on environmental condition and number of individuals in a population
The optimal range is where reproductive growth, and maintenance is at its best, so there are the most population individuals there
As ocean temperature rises, this can cause a reprocess called coral bleaching to occur, where the coral ends up dying
Oxygen sag curve is a ploy of dissolved oxygen levels versus disgrace from a source of pollution with excess nutrients
Dissolved oxygen increase when biological oxygen demand decreases, and vice versa
Oil Spills
Oil spills are always a risk, and can happen with oil tankers, pipelines, rail cars, and extraction sites
Oil that floats on the surface of the water can coat the feathers of birds, robbing them of both insulation and the ability to fly
The fur of marine mammals like seals and sea otters can become saturated with oil, inhibiting their waterproofing and ability to maintain their body temperature
They can ingest the hydrocarbons as they they try to groom the oil from their fur, and like all organisms that ingest or inhale hydrocarbons, die from poisoning
Entire food chains are impacted by oil spills
Organisms at the bottom of the oil can die from oil ingestion, as oil blobs don’t break up
Coastal economies are also impacted
Sediments in water can reduce light for aquatic plants, inhibit visual predators, and smother eggs and larvae aquatic organisms
Heavy metals in drinking water can cause health issues, such as
Lead
Arsenic
Cadmium
Mercury
Causes neurological damage
Happens most often through eating fish or other aquatic organisms
In wastewater, there mercury is converted into a bacteria called methylmercury, which can also cause birth defects
Copper
Chromium
Plastic waste is a threat to wildlife
Ingestion of litter has no nutritional value, and can block feeding tubes, leading to starvation of organisms
Entanglement and suffocation of plastic and nets can kill marine organisms
Litter can also cause toxins
Microplastics are tiny, degraded plastic particles and fibers that can contribute toxins to the environment in two ways:
The release of endocrine-disrupting chemicals like BPA added to plastic polymers when they are produced
Chemicals like pesticides cling to the tiny particles and are then infested by plankton and other organisms
Unit 8.3: Endocrine Disruptors
Endocrine Disruptors - a group of diverse chemicals
Synthetic Chemicals used as
Industrial solvents/lubricants and their byproducts
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
Polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs)
Dioxins
Plastics and plastic Wes
Bisphenol A (BPA)
Phthalates
Pesticides and fungicides
Pharmaceuticals
Natural Chemicals in food
Phytoestrogens found in soy
Any chemical that interferes with the production, transport, metabolism, or function of hormone in bodies in the endocrine system
Cell signaling is disrupted
Endocrine Disruptors can mimic the structure of a signaling chemical that would normally bind with a cell receptor to trigger a cellular response
Endocrine disruptors can also block the signal from reaching the receptor or block the transduction cascade
Consequences included reproductive abnormalities, birth and developmental defects, or possible behavioral changes
There can be exposure to chemicals through spills or toxic waste
Exposure of endocrine disruptors are very consistent in aquatic life
These chemicals can enter waterways and bioaccumulate in organisms and biomagnify in the food chain so that top-level consumers are most impacted
This disruptors can also affect the male reproductive organs
Unit 8.4: Human Impacts on Wetlands and Mangroves
Wetlands - defined as having water covering the soil or is near the surface of the soil for all or most of the heat
Coastal or tidal wetlands have fluctuating salinity and water levels as they are influenced by the tides
Inland orb on tidal wetlands are along rivers and floodplains, in depressions or low-lying areas near lakes and ponds and often have a seasonal nature to them
Filtration improves water quality
Water can move slowly in wetlands, giving sediment, nutrients, and pollutants time to drop out of suspension in the water column to the bottom of the wetland
Pollutants can stick to soil particles or be taken up by plants
Much of this is reduced as water moves out of wetlands because of this filtering capacity
Flood Control
Wetlands act like sponges, holding water in place and releasing it slowly
By slowing the movement of water, flood heights are reduced along with their erosive powers
Coastal shorelines are protected and stabilized
Maintaining Water Flow During Dry Periods
Groundwater is recharged as water is held in wetland soils
This also helps maintain surface water flow during dry seasons
Increase biological productivity
Wetlands are some of the most productive ecosystem on the planet
Shallow water and plenty of plants allow for diverse habitats for animals and birds
Nutrient rich soils enhance plant growth which in turn provides food for diverse and abundant species
Mangroves - are part of tidal wetlands
Wetlands are remarkably productive ecosystems and important to our world’s biological diversity
Both inland and coastal wetlands can be impacted by human activities
Mangroves are a particularly productive and valuable type of coastal wetland
Threats to Wetlands
Development of commercial properties like restaurants, malls, airports, business offices, gas stations, etc, can be damaging to wetlands
Development can include filling in wetlands to build access roads, parking areas, or place utilities
Construction can increase sedimentation, destroy habitat, and redirect water flow
Wetlands Protection and Restoration Act - regulates development in wetlands in the US.
Dam construction restricts and reduces water flowing into wetlands by disconnecting rivers from their floodplains and wetlands
This is a threat to organisms in this habitat
Overfishing - people harvest fish after than they can be replenished by reproduction in the population
This creates imbalance in the entire food web within a wetland area
Excess nutrients and pollutants from agricultural and industrial operations can impacts wetlands
Waste management is critical
Management of manure, pesticides, insecticide and soil management can help protect wetlands, surface, and groundwater
Unit 8.5: Eutrophication
Eutrophication- when a waterway received excess nutrients
Sources of Cultural Eutrophication:
Excess fertilizers from farm fields
Sewage form wastewater treatment
Nitrogen from animal manure
Phosphate from detergents
Materials are washed away by rain, melting snow, and irrigation into streams, ponds, and lakes
Eutrophic Waterway - one that has high levels of algae as a result of excess nutrients, and low dissolved oxygen
With this overabundance of nutrients, plants, algae, and cyanbacteria (sometimes called blue-green algae) grow rapidly
Oligotrophic Waterway - have very low amounts of nutrients, and high dissolved oxygen
Stable Aquatic System - has a stable amount of algae, aquatic plants, and fish
Dissolved oxygen is high
Eutrophic Aquatic System - a storm event washes excess fertilizer into the aquatic system
The alga grow and reproduce creating a bloom
Hypoxic Aquatic System - as the algae die they sink to the bottom where oxygen-consuming microbes digest the dead cells
Oxygen is rapidly consumed reducing it to dangerously high levels
Low oxygen levels can result in die-off of fish and other animals
Aquatic organisms will try to leave since they can’t tolerate low oxygen levels. If they can’t leave, they die, and this adds more waste to be digested by oxygen-consuming microbes
Hypoxia creates dead zones
Organic dead zones are areas of low oxygen in the world’s oceans and lakes caused be increased nutrient pollution
An oxygen sag curve is a plot of dissolved oxygen levels versus the distance from a source of pollution, usually excess nutrients and biological refuse
Unit 8.6: Thermal Pollution
Sources of Thermal Pollution
When heated water is discharged into bodies of water, it is considered thermal pollution
Power and industrial plants draw in water to cool machinery or products. They then discharge back into a water source
Other sources include
Soil erosion
Deforestation/shade reduction
Discharge from wastewater treatment
Urban runoff
Impacts of Thermal Pollution
Warm water does not hold as much dissolved oxygen as colder water
Feeding, breeding, and migration factors could alter with thermal pollution
Habitats could also change
When dissolved oxygen levels drop, it can lead to
Unit 8.7: Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
Persistent Organic Pollutants are:
Persistent
Organic
Often in rings, with chlorine attached to outside of rin
Synthetic
Nonpolar
DDT - Dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane
Insecticide Meaning if it gets into fatty tissues, it will remain in an organism
POPs can travel long distance
Colorless crystal
Banned for use in United States
PCBS - Polychlorinated biphenyl
Industrial fluid/chemical
Yellow liquid
Banned for use in United States
POPs contaminate water and soil
Clean Water Act
Safe Drinking Water Act
RCRA - Resource Conservation and and Recovery Act
CERCLA - Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act
Stockholm Convention
All legislation used to regular use of POPs
POPs are fat-soluble
Accumulate over time
POPs can travel long distances and can have local and global impact
Unit 8.8: Bioaccumulatiom and Biomagnification
Bioaccumulation - the gradual accumulation of substances, such as pesticides or other chemicals, in an organism
Organisms lower on the food change accumulate pollutants into their fatty tissues
Substances that bioaccumulate
DDT
Methylmercury
PCB
These are persistent
These substances bioaccumulate in fatty tissue
Biomagnification - the rise of increase of contaminated substances caused by intoxicating the environment
Levels of Mercury increase up the food chain
Consumption along a food chain/web increases the concentration of the substance in the fatty tissues of organisms at each successive trophic level
Apex predators suffer the greatest effects of these substances because bioaccumulation has concentrated the substance in their fatty tissues
Many common apex predators include birds and raptors
Humans are also considered apex predators
Humans can suffer learning disabilities, kidney/liver dysfunction, damage to reproductive/circulatory/nervous systems, birth defects
Apex predators can suffer developmental deformities and eggshell thinning, specifically from DDT
Unit 8.9: Solid Waste Disposal
Municipal Solid Waste - produced by households, businesses, etc
Paper is the largest category of solid waste
E-Waste - electronic waste, any waste that needs electricity to function
Often contain toxic metals like mercury and lead, and other persistent pollutants
Clean Water Act and Safe Water Act ensures that e-waste does not end up in our drinking water
RCRA - Resources Conservation and Recovery Act
CERCLA - Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act
Open Landfill
Odor
Poor contaminant of solid waste and leachate
Flammable
Animal disturbances
Low aesthetic value
Sanitary Landfill
Liner (clay, plastic)
Garbage
Leachate and methane (CH4) collection/monitoring systems
When full: cap and continuous monitoring
Anaerobic decomposition produces methane
Solid waste can be incinerated
This means to burn it at high temperatures
Pros: reduces waste, can be used as energy source
Cons: solid waste remains, air pollutants released
This can produce air pollution
Clean Air Act
Solid waste can be illegally dumped
Pros: does not take up large space, convenient
Cons: unregulated methane/leachate emissions, emissions of pollutants associated with specific dumped items, disease
Some countries do not use landfill very often, so they just dump it in the ocean
Pros: convenient, no drawbacks associated with landfills
Cons: impacts marine ecosystems and organisms
This can heavily impact marine life, with effects such as physical entanglement
Marine organisms can be mistaken for food, and have damage done to their digestive system
Bioaccumulation/biomagnification of some toxins – symbol and just a plastic can play a part in this process
Unit 8.10: Waste Reduction Methods
E-Waste
Contains hazardous metals like lead and Mercury
Can leach into soil and groundwater
Recycle waste before it goes into a landfill
Reduce, reuse, recycle
Recycling takes many substances out of the waste stream, such as wood, paper, lawn waste, glass, metal, etc
Reduces need to mine minerals
Costly to pick up, further sort, truly recycle
Fees and fines can incentivize recycling
Composting produces topsoil
Can be done individually or large scale
Can include household scraps, yard waste, agricultural residues
Not all household scraps can be composted
Can produce odor and attract vermin if not properly maintained
Waste to Energy Plant
Sort waste —> some goes to recycling, rest goes to incinerator —> water is burned —> water boils —> stream turns turbine —> turbine turns generator —> electricity!
Reduced amount of waste in landfill
Some waste still produced: ash, hazardous waste, air pollution
Methane Gas capture and use:
Decomposition reduces volume of waste in landfill
Gas can be burned to create electricity
Some gas can still escape: greenhouse gas
Gas is low quality, requires refining
Cap to full landfill to use as park, golf course, recreational area, etc
Improves aesthetic of area, can be a source of revenue
Still requires monitoring
There are consequences to poorly managed solid waste
Non recycled hazardous waste can pollute surrounding soil and water, even in a landfill
Heavy metal toxins: lead, mercury
Reduce/reuse/recycle programs can take solid waste out of the waste stream
Dimensional analysis is a key component of math in AP Environmental Science
Unit 8.11: Sewage Treatment
Sewage treatment plans often contain materials flushed down the toilet and from the sink
Sewage Treatment Plants
Primary Treatment
Physical processes
Removal of:
Sticks
Rocks
Rages
Toys
Other large objects
Screening tanks are used to remove these items
Secondary Treatment
Biological processes
Bacteria perform aerobic decomposition to break down organic matter
Aeration
Tertiary Treatment and Disinfection
Ecological/chemical processes
Removes final impurities and pollutants like nitrogen/phosphorus based chemicals
Disinfection uses
Chlorine
Ozone
UV light
Water quality is monitored at all stages
Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Act lays at criteria for these things
Sewage Treatment Produces Waste
Solids removed during primary and secondary treatment must be disposed of
Landfills:
Take up space
Potential groundwater contamination
Methane produced during anaerobic decomposition can escape
Pollution produced by transportation
Agricultural land:
Potential for bacterial infection of humans/animals that eat crops
Potential groundwater/soil/plant contamination
Potential for biomagnification of pollutants
Potential for eutrophication in nearby waterways
Unit 8.12: Lethal Dose 50% (LD50)
Everything has an LD50
Lethal Dose 50%
Amount of a substance that is lethal to 50% of a population of animals
Common unit: mg substance/kg body mass
Data is extrapolated to predict effects on humans
Examples: water, cyanide
Relates to biomagnification and bioaccumulation because of these lethal doses get into the fatty tissues, as it moves up the food chain it can poison organisms
Helps explain outcomes of biomagnification
Unit 8.13: Dose Response Curve
Dose Response Curve
Shows data collected while testing effect a toxin/drug has on a given population
LD50 can be determined from graph
Threshold dose can be determined from graph
Effects of toxin/drug on humans can be extrapolated from graph
Unit 8.14: Pollution and Human Health
Diverse Exposures
It can be difficult to establish a cause and effect between pollutants and human health issues, because humans experience exposure to a variety of chemicals and pollutants such as:
Food
Water
Air
Building materials and household items
There are health issues, however, they are clearly linked with certain environmental conditions or exposures
Dysentery - inflammation of the intestines caused by bacteria or parasites
People can experience bloody diarrhea and abdominal cramping
Dysentery is caused by untreated sewage in streams and rivers. Contamination can be detected by sampling for fecal form in water sources.
Mesothelioma - exposure to asbestos, a type of insulation material, can result in this type of cancer
Asbestos is a natural mineral made of tiny glass like fibers that are easily inhaled. Overtime, this inflammation damages the cells lining the lungs, heart, and abdomen.
Tropospheric Ozone Causes Respiratory Issues
Ground level ozone is a secondary air pollutant that is formed from volatile organic compounds, nitrogen, oxide, and sunlight
EPA’s air quality index (AQI) can help communities notify people, especially those already at risk of respiratory conditions like asthma, when air quality is a threat of health level
Lung function can be compromised
Ozone can construct the muscles in our airways. This traps air in the alveoli of the lungs, causing shortness of breath.
Ozone can also inflame and damage airways will also making lungs more susceptible to infections
Unit 8.15: Pathogens and Infectious Diseases
Pathogens cause disease
Any organism can cause a disease:
Viruses
Bacteria
Protozoans
Worms
Fungi
We call them germs or infectious agents
Pathogens can occur in many environments, regardless of the appearance of sanitary conditions
Pathogens adapt
Pathogens can infect and spread through human populations
As our climate shifts, opportunities, for movement of pathogens are created
As equatorial type climate zone spread north and south from the equator, pathogens, and the vectors that carry them are showing up in places they’ve never seen before
Vectors can spread pathogens
Vector - an organism that can transmit diseases between humans and between animals and humans
Example: mosquitoes
Pathogens cycle through environments
They spread through:
Airborne particles
Skin contact
Bodily fluids
Contact with feces
Touching surfaces that infected person has touched
Bite of a vector, like mosquito or tick
Contaminated water can transmit disease
Poverty stricken areas often lack sanitary waste, disposal, leading to contaminate the drinking water, and the easy spread of infectious diseases
Cholera - a bacterial disease contracted from infected water
Severe, diarrhea and dehydration can result in death if left untreated
Airborne droplets can transmit disease
Tuberculosis - is caused by bacteria and attacks the lungs
Droplets from the coughs and sneezes from an infected person transmit the disease to the air, where others breathe in the pathogens
Aerosols transmit disease as well
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and middle eastern respiratory syndrome (MERS) are respiratory diseases caused by coronaviruses, identified as SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV
The disease COVID-19 is also caused by a coronavirus and as identified as SARS-CoV-2
Severe respiratory diseases and pneumonia can be caused by these viruses as they spread from person a person
Pathogen Spillover
When a disease originated in animals and then spreads to humans, it is called a spillover event
SARS-CoV ans MERS-CoV originated in bats, and then spread to animals that were closer to people, like civets and camels
Like these other coronaviruses, SARS-CoV-2 is thought to also have originated in bats, and the investigations continue to learn more about its transmission
Plague is caused by bacteria
People contract the Sylvatic plague from the bacteria Yersinia pestis after being hit by an infected flea
Feliz carry the disease are often found on mammals, particularly rodents
Antibiotics allow us to control the plague in humans and wildlife. It can still be a problem.
Mosquitoes are vectors
They are a common factor of bacteria, viruses, and parasites that cause disease
Zika Virus
Can spread to humans by infected mosquitoes
People can also contract the virus from sexual contact with an infected person
For most people, the disease symptoms are mild
If pregnant women are infected, however, the virus can cause a severe birth defect, called microcephaly and other severe fetal brain deformities
West Nile Virus
First found in the US in the late 1990: and has spread from the east coast across the country
The virus spread to humans and other animals, like horses, through mosquito bites
Most people have few and miles symptoms from the virus, such as a fever, rash, and fatigue
In severe cases, the virus can cause encephalitis, meningitis, and other issues of the central nervous system
Malaria
Causes by Plasmodium, a single-called parasite, there are 5 species that cause malaria
It is transmitted from mosquito bites
The parasite infects your red blood cells and causes them to burst. If left untreated, people can develop severe complications, and die
Hundreds of millions of people, many children, die each year due to malaria. This is found mostly and sub Saharan Africa.
Unit 8.1: Sources of Pollution
Categories of Water Pollution
Point Source
Pollution that enters the environment from a single source and is clearly identified
Source include:
Wastewater treatment plants
Electronic or automobile manufacturers
Paper or pulp mills
Oil refineries
Concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFO)
Leaking underground gasoline storage tanks
No point Source
Pollution that can not be traced back to a single point or property, not from a single pipe
Contributions of contaminants come from many sources accumulating over a wide area and eventually reaching a level that impairs water quality
Agricultural and residential areas can have excess chemicals such as:
Fertilizers
Herbicides
Insecticides
Water from rain, snowmelt, and irrigation running off parking lots, roads, lawns in urban/suburban areas can be a source of
Oil
Grease
Toxic chemicals
Sediment - soil particles made of sand, gravel, and clay from improperly managed construction sites, crops and forest lands, and eroding stream banks
One of the most significant non point source pollutants in the US
Categories differentiate the sources of contamination in order to manager them effectively
EPA sets water quality standards, and these classifications help determine protection strategies
Ground and surface waters can be impacted by both point and non point source pollution
Clean Water Act - requires industries of point sources to get a permit form that state and/or EPA before they can discharge any effluent into a body of water
Unit 8.2: Human Impacts on Ecosystems
Coral reefs are important ecosystems
Critical ecosystems in the oceans cover less than 1% of the area but support 25% of marine species
Animals that live symbiotically with algae that photosynthesize
Destructive Fishing Practices
Bottom Trawling scrapes nets along the ocean floor and breaks and crushed coral
Marine Debris like unattended nets, traps, and monofilament fishing line can damage and injurie reefs and reef-dependent organisms like young fish
Overfishing removes fish, especially herbivores, which help maintain healthy algae populations in the reef ecosystem
Cyanide fishing is when sodium cyanide is poured over an area to stun fish so they are easier to catch for the aquarium and restaurant trade, which poisons corals
Sedimentation Threatens Coral
Sedimentation, such as rock, clay, and sand, can bury corals, blocking the sunlight needed by the symbiont so no photosynthesis occurs, again resulting in the death of the coral
Rangle of Tolerance - based on environmental condition and number of individuals in a population
The optimal range is where reproductive growth, and maintenance is at its best, so there are the most population individuals there
As ocean temperature rises, this can cause a reprocess called coral bleaching to occur, where the coral ends up dying
Oxygen sag curve is a ploy of dissolved oxygen levels versus disgrace from a source of pollution with excess nutrients
Dissolved oxygen increase when biological oxygen demand decreases, and vice versa
Oil Spills
Oil spills are always a risk, and can happen with oil tankers, pipelines, rail cars, and extraction sites
Oil that floats on the surface of the water can coat the feathers of birds, robbing them of both insulation and the ability to fly
The fur of marine mammals like seals and sea otters can become saturated with oil, inhibiting their waterproofing and ability to maintain their body temperature
They can ingest the hydrocarbons as they they try to groom the oil from their fur, and like all organisms that ingest or inhale hydrocarbons, die from poisoning
Entire food chains are impacted by oil spills
Organisms at the bottom of the oil can die from oil ingestion, as oil blobs don’t break up
Coastal economies are also impacted
Sediments in water can reduce light for aquatic plants, inhibit visual predators, and smother eggs and larvae aquatic organisms
Heavy metals in drinking water can cause health issues, such as
Lead
Arsenic
Cadmium
Mercury
Causes neurological damage
Happens most often through eating fish or other aquatic organisms
In wastewater, there mercury is converted into a bacteria called methylmercury, which can also cause birth defects
Copper
Chromium
Plastic waste is a threat to wildlife
Ingestion of litter has no nutritional value, and can block feeding tubes, leading to starvation of organisms
Entanglement and suffocation of plastic and nets can kill marine organisms
Litter can also cause toxins
Microplastics are tiny, degraded plastic particles and fibers that can contribute toxins to the environment in two ways:
The release of endocrine-disrupting chemicals like BPA added to plastic polymers when they are produced
Chemicals like pesticides cling to the tiny particles and are then infested by plankton and other organisms
Unit 8.3: Endocrine Disruptors
Endocrine Disruptors - a group of diverse chemicals
Synthetic Chemicals used as
Industrial solvents/lubricants and their byproducts
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
Polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs)
Dioxins
Plastics and plastic Wes
Bisphenol A (BPA)
Phthalates
Pesticides and fungicides
Pharmaceuticals
Natural Chemicals in food
Phytoestrogens found in soy
Any chemical that interferes with the production, transport, metabolism, or function of hormone in bodies in the endocrine system
Cell signaling is disrupted
Endocrine Disruptors can mimic the structure of a signaling chemical that would normally bind with a cell receptor to trigger a cellular response
Endocrine disruptors can also block the signal from reaching the receptor or block the transduction cascade
Consequences included reproductive abnormalities, birth and developmental defects, or possible behavioral changes
There can be exposure to chemicals through spills or toxic waste
Exposure of endocrine disruptors are very consistent in aquatic life
These chemicals can enter waterways and bioaccumulate in organisms and biomagnify in the food chain so that top-level consumers are most impacted
This disruptors can also affect the male reproductive organs
Unit 8.4: Human Impacts on Wetlands and Mangroves
Wetlands - defined as having water covering the soil or is near the surface of the soil for all or most of the heat
Coastal or tidal wetlands have fluctuating salinity and water levels as they are influenced by the tides
Inland orb on tidal wetlands are along rivers and floodplains, in depressions or low-lying areas near lakes and ponds and often have a seasonal nature to them
Filtration improves water quality
Water can move slowly in wetlands, giving sediment, nutrients, and pollutants time to drop out of suspension in the water column to the bottom of the wetland
Pollutants can stick to soil particles or be taken up by plants
Much of this is reduced as water moves out of wetlands because of this filtering capacity
Flood Control
Wetlands act like sponges, holding water in place and releasing it slowly
By slowing the movement of water, flood heights are reduced along with their erosive powers
Coastal shorelines are protected and stabilized
Maintaining Water Flow During Dry Periods
Groundwater is recharged as water is held in wetland soils
This also helps maintain surface water flow during dry seasons
Increase biological productivity
Wetlands are some of the most productive ecosystem on the planet
Shallow water and plenty of plants allow for diverse habitats for animals and birds
Nutrient rich soils enhance plant growth which in turn provides food for diverse and abundant species
Mangroves - are part of tidal wetlands
Wetlands are remarkably productive ecosystems and important to our world’s biological diversity
Both inland and coastal wetlands can be impacted by human activities
Mangroves are a particularly productive and valuable type of coastal wetland
Threats to Wetlands
Development of commercial properties like restaurants, malls, airports, business offices, gas stations, etc, can be damaging to wetlands
Development can include filling in wetlands to build access roads, parking areas, or place utilities
Construction can increase sedimentation, destroy habitat, and redirect water flow
Wetlands Protection and Restoration Act - regulates development in wetlands in the US.
Dam construction restricts and reduces water flowing into wetlands by disconnecting rivers from their floodplains and wetlands
This is a threat to organisms in this habitat
Overfishing - people harvest fish after than they can be replenished by reproduction in the population
This creates imbalance in the entire food web within a wetland area
Excess nutrients and pollutants from agricultural and industrial operations can impacts wetlands
Waste management is critical
Management of manure, pesticides, insecticide and soil management can help protect wetlands, surface, and groundwater
Unit 8.5: Eutrophication
Eutrophication- when a waterway received excess nutrients
Sources of Cultural Eutrophication:
Excess fertilizers from farm fields
Sewage form wastewater treatment
Nitrogen from animal manure
Phosphate from detergents
Materials are washed away by rain, melting snow, and irrigation into streams, ponds, and lakes
Eutrophic Waterway - one that has high levels of algae as a result of excess nutrients, and low dissolved oxygen
With this overabundance of nutrients, plants, algae, and cyanbacteria (sometimes called blue-green algae) grow rapidly
Oligotrophic Waterway - have very low amounts of nutrients, and high dissolved oxygen
Stable Aquatic System - has a stable amount of algae, aquatic plants, and fish
Dissolved oxygen is high
Eutrophic Aquatic System - a storm event washes excess fertilizer into the aquatic system
The alga grow and reproduce creating a bloom
Hypoxic Aquatic System - as the algae die they sink to the bottom where oxygen-consuming microbes digest the dead cells
Oxygen is rapidly consumed reducing it to dangerously high levels
Low oxygen levels can result in die-off of fish and other animals
Aquatic organisms will try to leave since they can’t tolerate low oxygen levels. If they can’t leave, they die, and this adds more waste to be digested by oxygen-consuming microbes
Hypoxia creates dead zones
Organic dead zones are areas of low oxygen in the world’s oceans and lakes caused be increased nutrient pollution
An oxygen sag curve is a plot of dissolved oxygen levels versus the distance from a source of pollution, usually excess nutrients and biological refuse
Unit 8.6: Thermal Pollution
Sources of Thermal Pollution
When heated water is discharged into bodies of water, it is considered thermal pollution
Power and industrial plants draw in water to cool machinery or products. They then discharge back into a water source
Other sources include
Soil erosion
Deforestation/shade reduction
Discharge from wastewater treatment
Urban runoff
Impacts of Thermal Pollution
Warm water does not hold as much dissolved oxygen as colder water
Feeding, breeding, and migration factors could alter with thermal pollution
Habitats could also change
When dissolved oxygen levels drop, it can lead to
Unit 8.7: Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
Persistent Organic Pollutants are:
Persistent
Organic
Often in rings, with chlorine attached to outside of rin
Synthetic
Nonpolar
DDT - Dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane
Insecticide Meaning if it gets into fatty tissues, it will remain in an organism
POPs can travel long distance
Colorless crystal
Banned for use in United States
PCBS - Polychlorinated biphenyl
Industrial fluid/chemical
Yellow liquid
Banned for use in United States
POPs contaminate water and soil
Clean Water Act
Safe Drinking Water Act
RCRA - Resource Conservation and and Recovery Act
CERCLA - Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act
Stockholm Convention
All legislation used to regular use of POPs
POPs are fat-soluble
Accumulate over time
POPs can travel long distances and can have local and global impact
Unit 8.8: Bioaccumulatiom and Biomagnification
Bioaccumulation - the gradual accumulation of substances, such as pesticides or other chemicals, in an organism
Organisms lower on the food change accumulate pollutants into their fatty tissues
Substances that bioaccumulate
DDT
Methylmercury
PCB
These are persistent
These substances bioaccumulate in fatty tissue
Biomagnification - the rise of increase of contaminated substances caused by intoxicating the environment
Levels of Mercury increase up the food chain
Consumption along a food chain/web increases the concentration of the substance in the fatty tissues of organisms at each successive trophic level
Apex predators suffer the greatest effects of these substances because bioaccumulation has concentrated the substance in their fatty tissues
Many common apex predators include birds and raptors
Humans are also considered apex predators
Humans can suffer learning disabilities, kidney/liver dysfunction, damage to reproductive/circulatory/nervous systems, birth defects
Apex predators can suffer developmental deformities and eggshell thinning, specifically from DDT
Unit 8.9: Solid Waste Disposal
Municipal Solid Waste - produced by households, businesses, etc
Paper is the largest category of solid waste
E-Waste - electronic waste, any waste that needs electricity to function
Often contain toxic metals like mercury and lead, and other persistent pollutants
Clean Water Act and Safe Water Act ensures that e-waste does not end up in our drinking water
RCRA - Resources Conservation and Recovery Act
CERCLA - Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act
Open Landfill
Odor
Poor contaminant of solid waste and leachate
Flammable
Animal disturbances
Low aesthetic value
Sanitary Landfill
Liner (clay, plastic)
Garbage
Leachate and methane (CH4) collection/monitoring systems
When full: cap and continuous monitoring
Anaerobic decomposition produces methane
Solid waste can be incinerated
This means to burn it at high temperatures
Pros: reduces waste, can be used as energy source
Cons: solid waste remains, air pollutants released
This can produce air pollution
Clean Air Act
Solid waste can be illegally dumped
Pros: does not take up large space, convenient
Cons: unregulated methane/leachate emissions, emissions of pollutants associated with specific dumped items, disease
Some countries do not use landfill very often, so they just dump it in the ocean
Pros: convenient, no drawbacks associated with landfills
Cons: impacts marine ecosystems and organisms
This can heavily impact marine life, with effects such as physical entanglement
Marine organisms can be mistaken for food, and have damage done to their digestive system
Bioaccumulation/biomagnification of some toxins – symbol and just a plastic can play a part in this process
Unit 8.10: Waste Reduction Methods
E-Waste
Contains hazardous metals like lead and Mercury
Can leach into soil and groundwater
Recycle waste before it goes into a landfill
Reduce, reuse, recycle
Recycling takes many substances out of the waste stream, such as wood, paper, lawn waste, glass, metal, etc
Reduces need to mine minerals
Costly to pick up, further sort, truly recycle
Fees and fines can incentivize recycling
Composting produces topsoil
Can be done individually or large scale
Can include household scraps, yard waste, agricultural residues
Not all household scraps can be composted
Can produce odor and attract vermin if not properly maintained
Waste to Energy Plant
Sort waste —> some goes to recycling, rest goes to incinerator —> water is burned —> water boils —> stream turns turbine —> turbine turns generator —> electricity!
Reduced amount of waste in landfill
Some waste still produced: ash, hazardous waste, air pollution
Methane Gas capture and use:
Decomposition reduces volume of waste in landfill
Gas can be burned to create electricity
Some gas can still escape: greenhouse gas
Gas is low quality, requires refining
Cap to full landfill to use as park, golf course, recreational area, etc
Improves aesthetic of area, can be a source of revenue
Still requires monitoring
There are consequences to poorly managed solid waste
Non recycled hazardous waste can pollute surrounding soil and water, even in a landfill
Heavy metal toxins: lead, mercury
Reduce/reuse/recycle programs can take solid waste out of the waste stream
Dimensional analysis is a key component of math in AP Environmental Science
Unit 8.11: Sewage Treatment
Sewage treatment plans often contain materials flushed down the toilet and from the sink
Sewage Treatment Plants
Primary Treatment
Physical processes
Removal of:
Sticks
Rocks
Rages
Toys
Other large objects
Screening tanks are used to remove these items
Secondary Treatment
Biological processes
Bacteria perform aerobic decomposition to break down organic matter
Aeration
Tertiary Treatment and Disinfection
Ecological/chemical processes
Removes final impurities and pollutants like nitrogen/phosphorus based chemicals
Disinfection uses
Chlorine
Ozone
UV light
Water quality is monitored at all stages
Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Act lays at criteria for these things
Sewage Treatment Produces Waste
Solids removed during primary and secondary treatment must be disposed of
Landfills:
Take up space
Potential groundwater contamination
Methane produced during anaerobic decomposition can escape
Pollution produced by transportation
Agricultural land:
Potential for bacterial infection of humans/animals that eat crops
Potential groundwater/soil/plant contamination
Potential for biomagnification of pollutants
Potential for eutrophication in nearby waterways
Unit 8.12: Lethal Dose 50% (LD50)
Everything has an LD50
Lethal Dose 50%
Amount of a substance that is lethal to 50% of a population of animals
Common unit: mg substance/kg body mass
Data is extrapolated to predict effects on humans
Examples: water, cyanide
Relates to biomagnification and bioaccumulation because of these lethal doses get into the fatty tissues, as it moves up the food chain it can poison organisms
Helps explain outcomes of biomagnification
Unit 8.13: Dose Response Curve
Dose Response Curve
Shows data collected while testing effect a toxin/drug has on a given population
LD50 can be determined from graph
Threshold dose can be determined from graph
Effects of toxin/drug on humans can be extrapolated from graph
Unit 8.14: Pollution and Human Health
Diverse Exposures
It can be difficult to establish a cause and effect between pollutants and human health issues, because humans experience exposure to a variety of chemicals and pollutants such as:
Food
Water
Air
Building materials and household items
There are health issues, however, they are clearly linked with certain environmental conditions or exposures
Dysentery - inflammation of the intestines caused by bacteria or parasites
People can experience bloody diarrhea and abdominal cramping
Dysentery is caused by untreated sewage in streams and rivers. Contamination can be detected by sampling for fecal form in water sources.
Mesothelioma - exposure to asbestos, a type of insulation material, can result in this type of cancer
Asbestos is a natural mineral made of tiny glass like fibers that are easily inhaled. Overtime, this inflammation damages the cells lining the lungs, heart, and abdomen.
Tropospheric Ozone Causes Respiratory Issues
Ground level ozone is a secondary air pollutant that is formed from volatile organic compounds, nitrogen, oxide, and sunlight
EPA’s air quality index (AQI) can help communities notify people, especially those already at risk of respiratory conditions like asthma, when air quality is a threat of health level
Lung function can be compromised
Ozone can construct the muscles in our airways. This traps air in the alveoli of the lungs, causing shortness of breath.
Ozone can also inflame and damage airways will also making lungs more susceptible to infections
Unit 8.15: Pathogens and Infectious Diseases
Pathogens cause disease
Any organism can cause a disease:
Viruses
Bacteria
Protozoans
Worms
Fungi
We call them germs or infectious agents
Pathogens can occur in many environments, regardless of the appearance of sanitary conditions
Pathogens adapt
Pathogens can infect and spread through human populations
As our climate shifts, opportunities, for movement of pathogens are created
As equatorial type climate zone spread north and south from the equator, pathogens, and the vectors that carry them are showing up in places they’ve never seen before
Vectors can spread pathogens
Vector - an organism that can transmit diseases between humans and between animals and humans
Example: mosquitoes
Pathogens cycle through environments
They spread through:
Airborne particles
Skin contact
Bodily fluids
Contact with feces
Touching surfaces that infected person has touched
Bite of a vector, like mosquito or tick
Contaminated water can transmit disease
Poverty stricken areas often lack sanitary waste, disposal, leading to contaminate the drinking water, and the easy spread of infectious diseases
Cholera - a bacterial disease contracted from infected water
Severe, diarrhea and dehydration can result in death if left untreated
Airborne droplets can transmit disease
Tuberculosis - is caused by bacteria and attacks the lungs
Droplets from the coughs and sneezes from an infected person transmit the disease to the air, where others breathe in the pathogens
Aerosols transmit disease as well
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and middle eastern respiratory syndrome (MERS) are respiratory diseases caused by coronaviruses, identified as SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV
The disease COVID-19 is also caused by a coronavirus and as identified as SARS-CoV-2
Severe respiratory diseases and pneumonia can be caused by these viruses as they spread from person a person
Pathogen Spillover
When a disease originated in animals and then spreads to humans, it is called a spillover event
SARS-CoV ans MERS-CoV originated in bats, and then spread to animals that were closer to people, like civets and camels
Like these other coronaviruses, SARS-CoV-2 is thought to also have originated in bats, and the investigations continue to learn more about its transmission
Plague is caused by bacteria
People contract the Sylvatic plague from the bacteria Yersinia pestis after being hit by an infected flea
Feliz carry the disease are often found on mammals, particularly rodents
Antibiotics allow us to control the plague in humans and wildlife. It can still be a problem.
Mosquitoes are vectors
They are a common factor of bacteria, viruses, and parasites that cause disease
Zika Virus
Can spread to humans by infected mosquitoes
People can also contract the virus from sexual contact with an infected person
For most people, the disease symptoms are mild
If pregnant women are infected, however, the virus can cause a severe birth defect, called microcephaly and other severe fetal brain deformities
West Nile Virus
First found in the US in the late 1990: and has spread from the east coast across the country
The virus spread to humans and other animals, like horses, through mosquito bites
Most people have few and miles symptoms from the virus, such as a fever, rash, and fatigue
In severe cases, the virus can cause encephalitis, meningitis, and other issues of the central nervous system
Malaria
Causes by Plasmodium, a single-called parasite, there are 5 species that cause malaria
It is transmitted from mosquito bites
The parasite infects your red blood cells and causes them to burst. If left untreated, people can develop severe complications, and die
Hundreds of millions of people, many children, die each year due to malaria. This is found mostly and sub Saharan Africa.