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POLLUTANT INFORMATION SHEET
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SEDIMENTS
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Particles of soils, sand, silt, clay and minerals wash from land and paved areas into creeks and tributaries. In large, unnatural quantities, these natural materials can be considered a pollutant. Construction projects often contribute large amounts of sediment. Certain lumbering practices affect sediments in runoff. Sediments may fill stream channels and harbours that later require dredging. Sediments suffocate fish and shellfish populations by covering fish spawning areas and clogging the gills of bottom fish and shellfish.
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
- Oil and other petroleum products like gasoline and kerosene can find their way into water from ships, oil drilling rigs, oil refineries, automobile service stations and streets. Oil spills kill aquatic life (fish, birds, shellfish and vegetation). Weathered oil becomes tarry and may make sand so hard that worms, mollusks, etc., can no longer live there. Birds are unable to fly when oil loads the feathers. Shellfish and small fish are poisoned. If it is washed onto the beach, the oil requires much labour to clean up. Fuel oil, gasoline and kerosene may leak into groundwater through damaged underground storage tanks.
ANIMAL WASTE
- Human wastes that are not properly treated at a waste treatment plant and then released to water may contain harmful bacteria and viruses. Typhoid fever, polio, cholera, dysentery (diarrhea), hepatitis, flu and common cold germs are examples of diseases caused by bacteria and viruses in contaminated water. The main source of the problem is sewage getting into the water. People can come into contact with these micro-organisms by drinking the polluted water or through swimming, fishing or eating shellfish in polluted waters. Often unexpected flooding of barnyards or stock pens can suddenly increase the toxic effects of animal waste in water. Animal waste can also act as a fertilizer and create damage by increasing nutrients. (See Fertilizers)
ORGANIC WASTES
- Domestic sewage treatment plants, food processing plants, paper mill plants and leather tanning factories release organic wasts that bacteria consume. If too much waste is released, the bacterial populations increase and use up the oxygen in the water. Fish die if too much oxygen is consumed by decomposing organic matter.
INORGANIC CHEMICALS
- Detergents, pesticides and many synthetic industrial chemicals are released to waterways. Many of these substances are toxic to fish and harmful to humans. They cause taste and odour problems and often cannot be treated effectively. Some are very poisonous at low concentrations.
Inorganic chemicals and mineral substances, solid matter and metal salts commonly dissolve into water. They often come from mining and manufacturing industries, oilfield operations, agriculture and natural sources. These chemicals interfere with natural stream purification; they destroy fish and other aquatic life. They also corrode expensive water treatment equipment and increase the cost of boat maintenance.
FERTILIZERS
- The major source of pollution from agriculture comes from surplus fertilizers in the runoff. Fertilizers contain nitrogen and phosporus that can cause large amounts of algae to grow. The large algae blooms cover the water's surface. The algae die after they have used all of the nutrients. Once dead, they sink to the bottom where bacteria feed on them. The bacterial populations increase and use up most of the oxygen in the water. Once the free oxygen is gone, many aquatic animals die. This process is called eutrophication.
HEATED OR COOLED WATER
- Heat reduces the ability of water to dissolve oxygen. Electric power plants use large quantities of water in their steam turbines. The heated water is often returned to streams, lagoons or reservoirs. With less oxygen in the water, fish and other aquatic life can be harmed. Water temperatures that are much lower than normal can also cause habitat damage. Deep dams often let extra water flow downstream. When the water comes from the bottom of the dam, it is much colder than normal.
ACID PRECIPITATION
- Aquatic animals and plants are adjusted to a rather narrow range of pH levels. pH is a measure of the acidity of a solution. When water becomes too acid, due to inorganic chemical pollution or from acid rain, fish and other organisms die.
PESTICIDES, HERBICIDES, FUNGICIDES
- Agricultural chemicals designed to kill or limit the growth of life forms are a common form of pollution. This pollution results from attempts to limit the negative effects of undesirable species on agricultural crop production. Irrigation, groundwater flow and natural runoff brings these toxic substances to rivers, streams, lakes and oceans.