Agricultural Pollution & Water Quality
- Agriculture can impact on water quality in a number of ways
- Wastewater from silage and slurry
- Fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides
- Soil erosion
- One of the main impacts of agriculture is eutrophication
Eutrophication
- Eutrophication is caused by an increase in the amount of nitrogen and phosphorus that is carried into streams and rivers from slurry and fertilizers
- This leads to nutrient enrichment
The process of eutrophication
- Algae blooms increase because of higher nutrient levels caused by eutrophication, which causes a positive feedback loop
- Increased algae blooms lead to increased decomposition as light cannot reach aquatic plants
- Which decreases oxygen levels
- This reduces consumers and further increases algae growth
- Anoxia can occur in the autumn season
- Dead zones occur near boundary points between river mouths and coastal zones
- There are three main reasons why eutrophication is a problem:
- Nitrogen can cause excessive growth of algae
- It can affect human health
- A loss of fertiliser is an economic loss for agricultural production
- There are several ways of resolving eutrophication:
- Use different types of fertilisers and detergents, which may alter human effects of pollution
- Pump mud from eutrophic water
- Remove nitrates and phosphates from water
- Reducing nitrate loss in the Northern Hemisphere:
- Barley straw uses nitrogen in the process of decay
- When soils are wet, avoid using nitrogen fertilisers
- Avoid applying nitrogen fertilisers to fields next to streams or lakes
- Avoid ploughing grass as it releases nitrogen
- Avoid applying fertiliser if rain is forecast
- Use barley straw to prevent the growth of algae