All living things depend on water for survival. For this reason,
all living things are dependent on healthy watersheds. Water
travels through watersheds across a variety of habitats and
ecosystems and eventually will empty into the ocean (with the
exception of the watersheds of the Great Salt Lake and the Dead
Sea). Because watersheds affect all of the ecosystems in the
world, they also affect all of the living things in the world.
A contaminated watershed can be devastating to a large number
of species in a variety of communities.
Water
is easily contaminated because of its property as a universal
solvent.
This property is also one of the things that makes water so
important to living things. Many substances dissolve in water.
Because some substances have electrical charges that are attracted
to the electrical charges of water molecules, the molecules
of these substances will bond with the molecules of the water.
This is what happens when salt or sugar is poured into a glass
of water. The salt or sugar molecules will bond with the water
molecules and, to the eye, seem to disappear. Because of this
solvent property, water is necessary for digestion and for
transporting substances around an organism’s body. In animals,
water helps to break down food into its usable nutrients,
and then the water in the blood helps to carry the nutrients
to the various cells of the body as well as carry the wastes
out of the body.
This property
that allows water to break down and transport nutrients in
living things also breaks down and transports contaminants
in watersheds. Chemicals or other impurities that are dropped
into watersheds will be dissolved in the water and transported
through the watershed, potentially across large areas of land.
Anything that drinks this contaminated water will also be
drinking the dissolved contaminants, with potentially unhealthy
results for the organism.
Because
a watershed can be as large as half a continent, contamination
is never completely localized within a watershed. Contaminants
released in a watershed near Greenville will travel across
South Carolina to the coast through the Santee Watershed.
Contamination on the Yellowstone River in Montana will eventually
travel across the states to Louisiana and the Gulf of Mexico
through the Mississippi River Watershed. For this reason,
when thinking about how to improve the health of a watershed,
the entire breadth of the watershed has to be considered.
Contaminants
enter watersheds through a variety of means. One type is categorized
as point source pollution. Point
source pollution enters the environment from an identifiable
source, such as from a discharge pipe of a factory. Industries
that have identifiable discharges include livestock farms,
landfills and water treatment plants. These industries discharge
many different kinds of pollution, ranging from livestock
manure to industrial chemicals.
Half
of the pollution in our nation’s waters comes from non-point
sources. Non-point sources of pollution include you, me and
everyone else that you know. Non-point
source pollution is pollution that comes from sources
that cannot be directly pointed out. An example of non-point
pollution is the fertilizer that people put on their lawns.
When excess fertilizer washes off of the lawn during a rainstorm
it can enter the watershed as runoff. Runoff is water that
flows on the surface across lawns, roads and other landscape
features. Pollution can be carried or dissolved in runoff
and enter the watershed. Once in a body of water, the pollution
can be sensed with the proper equipment, but it can not be
directly linked to any particular lawn in the community. Nonpoint
pollution originates from urban areas, agriculture land, construction
sites, lawns, and some industries, such as mining. The main
elements of polluted runoff are heavy metals, salts, sediment,
nutrients, and bacteria.
Sediment
can also be a contaminant in watersheds. Runoff picks up soil
as it travels over land. When vegetation is removed from land
for farms, the roots that held the soil in place are no longer
there, and the rainwater will easily erode it away. This sediment
is eventually carried in to the watersheds and can make major
changes in the quality and appearance of the water. For example
the reddish-brown water we associate with the rivers of the
Piedmont of South Carolina is not their natural appearance.
These rivers were clear until poor farming practices were
introduced into the Piedmont, and all of the exposed red clay
soil in the fields began washing into the rivers and streams
of the area.
Excess
nutrients are considered contaminants in watersheds. Nutrients
in watersheds are important because they support food chains
in the aquatic communities. Too many nutrients can cause major
problems, though. Excess nutrients can lead to algal blooms
in which the fast-multiplying algae explodes in population
because of the sudden influx of nutrients. The new algae will
use up all of the oxygen in the ecosystem which in turn will
lead to fishkills in which all of the animals in the aquatic
ecosystem die because of lack of oxygen. Excess nutrients
get into watersheds often through fertilizers that are put
on farms and lawns. Fertilizers are artificial nutrients that
are laid on fields and then brought into watersheds through
surface runoff. These are then carried to coastal areas where
they can cause algal blooms.
Most
contamination in watersheds occurs on a steady continuing
basis, but at times the contamination can be sudden and devastating.
An example of this was when Hurricane Floyd hit the Coastal
Plain of North Carolina in 1999. The deluge of water brought
into this area by the heavy rains of the hurricane flooded
the large pig farms and other farms of the area as well as
the septic tanks of many rural homes. All the wastes from
these farms and septic tanks began being carried by surface
runoff into the PeeDee River Watershed. Along with the wastes
came an abundance of bacteria known as fecal
coliforms (the most famous one is E. coli) into the
watershed. Because fecal coliforms are dangerous to animals,
those who lived downstream of these farms and septic tanks
in the Pee Dee Watershed around Myrtle Beach and Georgetown,
could not drink untreated tap water for months because they
would become seriously sick. This bacteria also affected wildlife,
particularly filter feeders such as oysters. Many oyster beds
have to be closed because the oysters have an abundance of
fecal coliforms in their bodies.
Since
over 50% of contamination in watersheds come from non-point
pollution, students can do a great deal to help reduce
contamination in local watersheds. Below are some examples
of things the students or their parents can do to help
local watersheds:
-
Conserve
the amount of water they use on a day-to-day basis.
The less water used will reduce the amount of wastewater
that will eventually enter the watershed.
-
Recycle
and compost. The less waste that enters landfills,
the less contaminants that the landfills will be
giving off.
-
Pick
up litter. Contaminants leach off of
litter and enter watersheds or the litter itself
will enter watersheds.
-
Bury
or flush pet wastes. Pet wastes left
in lawns becomes homes to fecal bacteria that can
be picked up by runoff and carried into watersheds.
-
Only
purchase and use environmentally friendly cleaners,
pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers. The
chemicals in many of these products can be very
detrimental to living things and can be easily picked
up by runoff and carried into local watersheds.
-
Properly
dispose of any chemical products. Never
dump products such as oil, antifreeze, paint remover,
cleaners and paint onto the ground or into storm
drains. Contact local waste management professionals
to find safe receptacles for these products.
-
Plant
native plants around the school and home.
Because native plants are adapted to the local
environment, they require less watering and fertilizer
than exotic plants, and so reduce wastewater and
runoff amounts.
-
Educate
others. The more people who understand the problems
and solutions involved in watersheds and become
involved in helping, the less non-point pollution
will be produced.
-
Become
involved in watershed conservation projects.
Projects such as the EPA's "Adopt a Watershed"
allow students to become involved in an organized
collective effort to continually improve the health
of watersheds.
-
Write
public officials about issues related to watershed
conservation. There are many ways to
help watersheds that can be fostered with government
support.
-
Preserve
and create wetlands. Wetlands are
very important for the health of watersheds.
Wetlands slow the speed of runoff and reduce
the amount of erosion that brings sediment into
rivers and lakes. The vegetation and mud in
wetlands also act as filters that hold impurities
and so help clean watersheds.
-
Preserve
and create riparian zones. Riparian
zones are areas of vegetation around rivers,
lakes, wetlands and other bodies of water that
act as buffer zones for watersheds. Like wetlands,
riparian zones slow runoff and erosion as well
as filter out impurities, helping to keep watersheds
clean. Maintaining riparian zones helps to keep
watersheds healthy.
-
Slow
development that increases impermeable surfaces.
Construction of roads and buildings creates
impermeable surfaces on which water can not
soak through. This increases the amount of runoff
entering watersheds, much of it containing contaminants
such as oil that collect on these impermeable
surfaces. By reducing development, the contaminants
entering watersheds will also be reduced.
-
Raise
controls on the pollution emissions of industry.
Waste given off by industry contaminates
watersheds. By carefully controlling how industries
dispose of their waste, less contamination will
enter watersheds.
-
Increase
wastewater treatment facilities. The
water leaving our homes and businesses though
our sinks, bathtubs and toilets are often full
of contaminants. Sending this wastewater to
a treatment plant helps to remove these impurities
before they enter a watershed.
-
Conserve
entire watersheds instead of just isolated habitats
This
last idea is probably the most important. Watersheds
connect habitats and ecosystems across a large area
of land. For this reason, a section of a river cannot
be conserved and expected to have healthy water quality
unless the areas of rivers and streams upstream in the
watershed are also conserved. Because watersheds are
such large areas and inhabited by so many different
species, maintaining the health of any watershed is
of great importance. Because people often inhabit all
areas of a watershed as well, it takes a collaborative
effort on the part of everyone living on the watershed
to help keep the watershed healthy. By being conscientious
and by spreading the word to others, everybody has the
opportunity to make a difference in improving the health
of watersheds.