coastal pollution
DESCRIPTION
Coastal Pollution. Sewage, industrial waste, soil nutrients, power plant thermal, agriculture runoff, oil seeps & mistakes, dumping, outboard motors, plastics, dumping, dredging wastes, fish processing, etc. Implications. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Coastal Pollution
• Sewage, industrial waste, soil
nutrients, power plant thermal,
agriculture runoff, oil seeps &
mistakes, dumping, outboard motors,
plastics, dumping, dredging wastes,
fish processing, etc.
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Implications
• Biological responses (individual
fitness & mortality, food web
structure, etc.)
• Eutrophication
• Habitat change
• Human health
• Smell
![Page 3: Coastal Pollution](https://reader035.vdocuments.mx/reader035/viewer/2022062422/56813857550346895da00030/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
The cynical viewpoint…
• The ultimate solution to pollution is
infinite dilution…
• So, dump pollutants in the infinite
reservoir, the ocean
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• Makes some sense
Economic & societal costs for land-based
disposal are high
We can’t see it!!
• But, what is “infinite dilution”
• What are “safe” concentrations?
The cynical viewpoint…
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What does the So Cal Bight Get?
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Point Sources
• Discharge pollution from a specific
location
– sewage discharge, power plant effluent, oil
produced water outlet, river, etc.
• Relatively easy to identify, monitor and
treat the wastes
• Need discharge permit
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Non-Point Sources
• No specific discharge location
– Run-off from ag, urban, roads, etc.
– Ship leaks, bilges, etc.
• Rainfall sweeps the accumulated
pollutants into waterways & to the
ocean
• Harder to identify, treat & manage
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Wastewater Discharges
• Largest source of freshwater inputs
to the SoCal Bight
• Both treated sewage disposal &
power plant coolant
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Waterborne Pathogens
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Wastewater Discharges
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Wastewater Discharges
raw
primary
secondary
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Primary Sewage Treatment
• separates out the large solids, sand, and gravel
• then put into settling ponds where the sludge settles out
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Secondary Sewage Treatment
• biological degradation of organic compounds
• bacteria ‘eats’ the nutrients in the waste and decomposes them
• followed by chlorine, ozone, or UV light treatment
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Tertiary Sewage Treatment
• removes nitrates and phosphates that could cause algal blooms
• wetlands can do this naturally
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Management of a Discharge
• Pollutant values need to be
monitored
• Does the discharge meet is
requirements?
• Need some metric of relevant
pollutant
– Measure indicator organism abundance
– Hope these are related to epidemiology
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Beach closure:
Performed by the localAgency (County, or District)
Intended to protect public health
Regulated throughAB411 in CA
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What’s measured: Indicator
bacteriaTotal Coliform
Fecal Coliform
Escherichia
E. ColiEnterococcus
FecalStreptococcus
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Confounding Issues
• Stormwater
• Leaky Septic Tanks
• Boats…
• Birds, Dogs, Natural wildlife
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Waterborne Pathogens
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Other Materials
•Heavy metals – mercury, lead, nickel – highly toxic, persistent, and bio-
accumulate– result from industrial activities
•Organic Compounds– PCB, DDT, herbicides, etc.– DDT is most concerning
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Surface sediment contamination
LA County dischargeoff Palos Verdes
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Montrose Chemical
Now a superfund site
Dumped TONS of DDTdown sewer
Ceased production in 1982
DDT has a 15 year ½ life
Bioaccumulates in some organisms
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DDE is the breakdown product of DDT
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Wastewater Discharges
• Largest source of freshwater to SoCal Bight
• Discharges include treated sewage, sludge &
contaminants
• Primary, secondary & tertiary levels of treatment
• History of sewage technology is seen in water
quality of beaches
• Montrose chemical plant created the DDT problem
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Bioaccumulation
• Some organisms accumulate pollutants (both
metals & organics) in their tissues
• Biomagnification is where accumulation increases
up a trophic food chain
• Well known cases are Hg, PCB, Pb (also algal toxins)
• Huge public health issue
• Some monitoring in place
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Mussel Watch Programs
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Regulations
• Marine Protection, Research &
Sanctuaries Act (MPRSA)
– Passed in 1972
– Regulates ocean dumping
– Bans radioactive, medical, sludge &
industrial dumping
– Regulates others
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Point Sources
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Regulations
• Clean Water Act
– Passed in 1972 amended in 1977 (???)
– Regulates point source discharges
– Requires a National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES) permit
– Compliance is mandated by monitoring
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EPA’s Clean Water Act “big picture”
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Sector of Interest SIC Discharger TypeNumber of
PermitsTotal
Publicly Owned Treatment Works
4952 Sewage Treatment Plant 154 154
Offshore Oil and Gas Facilities 1311 Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas
15 18
1382 Oil and Gas Field Exploration 2
N/A Offshore Oil and Gas 1
Sulfur Extraction N/A Sulfur Extraction 1 3
1479 Chemical and Fertilizer Mining, NEC
2
Lumber and Wood Products 2411 Logging 0 0
2421 Sawmills, Planing Mills, General 0
Desalination Plants 4941 Desalination Plants 6 6
Seawater Treatment Plants N/A Seawater Treatmen 3 3
Seafood Processors 2091 Canned and Cured Fish and Seafood
4 6
2092 Prepared Fresh or Frozen Fish 2
Sugarcane Mills 0133 Sugarcane and Sugar Beets 1 3
2061 Cane Sugar, Except Refining 2
Present NPDES Permits from EPA
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Summary
• Sources of pollutants to CA Current
– Mostly wastewater but others are
important
• Bioaccumulation & biomagnification
• Regulations – MPRSA & CWA