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WATER QUALITYWATER QUALITY FACTORSFACTORSWater BiologyPHC 6937Andrew S. Kane, Ph.D.University of FloridaEnvironmental Health Program, PHHPCenter for Environmental and Human ToxicologyEmerging Pathogens InstituteSome Water Facts• One-half of one percent of the world's water is available for all humans to use: 97% of the water on earth is salty(ocean water), 2% is locked (frozen) in the polar ice caps, 1/2% is in the atmosphere.• Many homes lose more water from leaky taps than they need for cooking and drinking.• A faucet that leaks one drop per second will waste 3,000 gallons of water in one year.• The United States has about 8% of the world's renewable freshwater supply.•Florida has more than 7,700 freshwater lakes and more than 8,000 miles of shoreline.• Among all the states east of the Mississippi River, Florida ranks first in terms of amount of water consumed inagricultural irrigation.• In developing countries, 80% of illnesses are water-related.• A 1993 outbreak of cryptosporidiosis in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is the largest outbreak of waterborne disease in theUnited States. Over 400,000 persons were affected by the disease, more than 4,000 were hospitalized, and over 50deaths have been attributed to the disease.• The Great Lakes constitute one of the largest systems of freshwater reservoirs on earth, with 18% of the world'sfresh surface water.• A woman's body is 50-60% water, a man's body is 60-65% water. (Fat tissues contain virtually no water)• An adult's body contains about 40 quarts of water (10 gallons).Some Water Facts• The human body loses between 2 and 3 quarts of water everyday from perspiration and normal elimination• About 83% of our blood is water. It helps digest our food, take in oxygen, transport body wastes, and control bodytemperature.• Typically less than 1% of all water treated for drinking is actually consumed by people. 99% of all water treated fordrinking is used for things like showers, lawn sprinkling, to flush toilets, etc.• A full grown tree emits 70 gallons of water into the atmosphere every day.• Estimates vary, but each person uses about 80-100 gallons of water per day at home.• In the U.S. in 1995 about 44,400 wastewater treatment plants sent about 44,600 million gallons per day of treatedwater back into the environment. About 983 million gallons per day was used again (reclaimed) after treatment,mainly as irrigation water.• Florida law requires that toilets used in new construction can use no more than 3.5 gallons of water per flush. Mosttraditional fixtures use 5 gallons per flush.• Florida law limits shower fixtures installed in new construction to 3 gallons of water per minute. Most existingfixtures use 4.7 gallons per minute.• In Florida we use twice the amount of water in Lake Okeechobee each year.Surface tensionWater DensityDiel fluctuations in pHDiel fluctuations in pHH2O + CO2 <--> H2CO3Diel fluctuations in pHEffect of pH on carbonatesEffects of D.O. on Aquatic OrganismsDiel fluctuations in O2D.O. Saturation NomogramLight Penetration in WaterLight Penetration in WaterLight Penetration in WaterTrophic states of lakesTotal chlorophyll is typically less than 3 µg/LTotal phosphorus is typically less than 15 µg/LTotal nitrogen is typically less than 400 µg/LWater clarity is typically greater than 13 feetTotal chlorophyll is typically between 3-7 µg/LTotal phosphorus is typically between 15-25 µg/LTotal nitrogen is typically between 400-600 µg/LWater clarity is typically between 8-13 feetTotal chlorophyll is typically greater than 40 µg/LTotal phosphorus is typically greater than 100 µg/LTotal nitrogen is typically greater than 1500 µg/LWater clarity is typically less than 3 feetOligotrophic MesotrophicTotal chlorophyll is typically between 7-40 µg/LTotal phosphorus is typically between 25-100 µg/LTotal nitrogen is typically between 600-1500 µg/LWater clarity is typically between 3-8 feetEutrophic HypereutrophicAdapted from Florida Lakewatch CircularSuccessionBog -> Marsh -> MeadowZonationThermal StratificationThermal StratificationPondsPonds• Body of water where light penetrates to the bottom of the water body• Water body shallow enough for rooted water plants to grow throughout its area• Water body which lacks wave action on the shorelinePond EcosystemPondPoolLakeCreekStreamCanalRiverTributaryDeltaEstuaryOceanMarshSwampBogWatershedDrainage BasinAnthropogenic changeSubsurface samplingChlorophyll/suspendedsPonar grabInvertebrate SamplingSecchi DepthPeriphyton


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UF PHC 6937 - Water_Quality

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