Water Pollution: Presented By-Panchali Das M.SC Biotechnology 4 Semester Bbau
Water Pollution: Presented By-Panchali Das M.SC Biotechnology 4 Semester Bbau
Water Pollution: Presented By-Panchali Das M.SC Biotechnology 4 Semester Bbau
Presented by-
Panchali Das
M.Sc Biotechnology
4th Semester
BBAU CRN 86946 CHEM 092 1
Water- as a scarce natural resource
2
Introduction:
More and more organizations and councils are working hard to educate,
protect, restore waterways and encourage practices that help keep waters
from contamination, and also to preserve water ecosystems from destruction.
Therefore stop using and abusing water resources in an un-sustainable manner.
The first step will be-
PREVENT WATER POLLUTION
3
What is Water Pollution?
4
Some examples from which Pollutants
arise..
• Factories & Refineries (Oil and industrial waste)
• Agriculture (Pesticides, fertilizers, Eutrophication)
• Human Sewage
• Mining (sediment run off)
• Household chemicals (soap, oven cleaners etc.)
• Dumping (non-biodegradable)
5
Types of water pollution
Point-Source Pollution:
• Point source water pollution
refers to contaminants that
enter a waterway from a single,
identifiable source, such as a
pipe or ditch.
• Examples of sources in this
category include discharges
from a sewage treatment plant,
a factory.
6
Types of water pollution ‘Cont.’
Non-point Source (NPS) Pollution:
• A widely spread source of pollution
that can’t be tied to a specific point of
origin.
• NPS pollution is caused by rainfall or
snowmelt moving over and through the
ground. As the runoff moves, it picks
up and carries away natural and
human-made pollutants, finally
depositing them into lakes, rivers,
wetlands, coastal waters, and even our
underground sources of drinking water.
7
Other forms of water pollution
9
Industrial Waste & Water Pollution
10
Human Waste & Water Pollution
11
Chemical run off and Water Pollution
• Pesticides
• Fertilizers Agricultural run-off
• Household cleaners
• Paints
• Industrials
• Metals
12
Atmosphere and Water pollution
• Acid rain is rain or another form
of precipitation that is more
acidic than normal.
• It is pollution of water caused by
air pollution. When the acidic
particles caused by air pollution
in the atmosphere mix with
water vapor, it results in acid
rain.
• Affect’s fish, harm trees, and eat
away the stone of buildings and
statues.
13
Oil Pollution
• Oil spills (from ships and tankers while traveling) cause a very
localized problem but can be catastrophic to local marine wildlife
such as fish, birds and sea otters.
• Oil cannot dissolve in water and forms
a thick sludge in the water. This suffocates
fish, gets caught in the feathers of marine
birds stopping them from flying and blocks
light from photosynthetic aquatic plants.
14
Nuclear Waste
• Nuclear waste is produced from industrial,
medical and scientific processes that use
radioactive material.
• The nuclear crisis that occurred in Japan
after 2011 Tsunami prompted Japanese
government dumped 11 million liters (2
million gallons) of radioactive water into the
Pacific Ocean.
• “We can’t see it. We can’t smell it. We
can’t touch it. The effects may not show up
now, in this decade, this generation even in
this century. Nevertheless, these senseless
nuclear impacts on us are far beyond
imagination…” 15
How do we know when water is polluted?
18
Preventative Measures
19
Preventative Measures
20
Did you know
The Ganges river in India is one
the most polluted in the world. 20% of the groundwater in China is used as
It contain sewage, trash, food, drinking water which is highly contaminated
and animal remains. with carcinogenic chemicals which cause high
levels of water pollution.
Ground water in Bangladesh is contaminated with
arsenic. Arsenic is very toxic, acute poison and a
carcinogen. Approximately 85% of the total area of
Bangladesh has contaminated groundwater.
22
23