Sediment
This may seem strange, but sediment is sometimes considered a pollutant
too! Sediment is considered a form of pollution when there is too
much of it. Excess sediment damages river environments by smothering
the organisms that live on the bottom. Sediment blocks sunlight,
which means that algae cannot grow (by photosynthesis). Remember,
the main sources of food in an estuary are algae and detritus. When
these are covered with sediment, they are no longer accessible to
the organisms that eat them. This affects the other animals in the
food web, some directly and some indirectly (more discussion on
this below).
What
causes excess sediment?
Erosion causes excess sediment. Erosion is the loss of soil and
gravel from the surface of land. It occurs when soil sediments are
exposed and swept away by wind or water. Soil is most likely to
erode when there is no vegetation covering it, securing it to the
ground. Erosion results in excess sediment that gets carried into
our waterways by rain, water, or wind.
You
can tell when erosion has occurred because you will see bare, exposed
ground. Streams and riverbanks erode readily as flowing water wears
away their sides and bottoms.
Agriculture,
development (building houses and businesses), and dredging (digging
channels in shallow water) are major contributors to erosion. These
practices speed up erosion by removing the grass and plants that
cover the soil and disturbing sediment.
Certain
farming practices lead to erosion. Clearing land to plant crops
exposes bare soil to wind and rain. When hillsides are farmed, rain
readily washes soil downhill. And, when windbreaks are not put up,
soil is blown away. Another agricultural problem is overgrazing.
When grazing animals are crowded, they may eat vegetation down to
the ground, exposing bare soil.
Clearing
land for development leads to erosion. Soil is exposed during the
process of building homes, businesses, and parking lots. This loose
soil gets blown and washed across pavement and fields. Eventually
it ends up in our waterways.
Dredging is the process of digging deep channels in water to make
room for large boats. Dredging stirs up large amounts of sediment.
This sediment gets picked up by water currents and may settle in
other areas. Estuaries often receive excess sediment from flood
tides.
Dredging may also result in reduced size of an estuary. Sometimes
sediment that is dredged gets re-deposited along coastline habitat.
Estuaries get filled in so that buildings can be built there. For
example, the San Francisco Bay, a large estuary, used to harvest
6,820,000 kg (15,000,000 pounds) of oysters per year. Now they harvest
none because all the oyster beds have been covered by excess sediment.
Although
these practices contribute greatly to erosion, it is important to
note that careful planning can reduce erosion. To learn more about
land-clearing practices that do a better job at containing sediment,
see Protecting our watershed: What YOU can do to help.
Excess
sediment causes many problems in an estuary. It covers up algae
and detritus, two very important food sources. It makes the river
bottom mushy, so that oysters and clams cannot attach and live there.
Excess sediment also covers fish eggs that are laid in gravel beds.
When
excess sediment harms detritus, algae, oysters and fish, all the
other organisms in the estuary are affected too. Animals that eat
algae and detritus, such as snails, fiddler crabs, shrimp, clams
and worms, no longer have a food source. When these herbivorous
animals cannot survive, the animals that eat them no longer have
a food source. Carnivorous striped bass, starfish, raccoons and
blue crabs no longer have anything to eat. And when these animals
cannot survive, wading birds, such as great blue herons, no longer
have anything to eat.
In
addition to losing our coastal treasures, we also lose potential
income. People that fish and harvest oysters and shrimp may go out
of business. It is estimated that two-thirds (2/3) of all commercial
fish spend some part of their life cycle in an estuary.
Pollution
is a difficult problem because it is produced as a by-product of
goods and services that are valuable to us. The good news is that
there are many things we each can do (yes, Y?U!) to help solve our
problem. To learn more about reducing your impact on the environment,
see Protecting our watershed: What YOU can do to help.
Remember,
we all live downstream ? in addition to local pollution, our water
contains pollutants from people living upstream. And, of course,
our pollution affects the water of people living downstream from
us.
Additional mini-paragraphs to be set as captions w/ associated pics/photos
Focus
on Kudzu: "Covers Dixie Like the Dew"
Focus
on Farming Along the Nile in Egypt: Ancient Times and Now
?
Spiny mussel and its specialized fish predator (story with pics
from Bud)
?
How bass are affected by excess sediment and its affect on local
fishers (story from Ron) (note: if fish are affected by excess algae,
then move story to Chemical Pollution web page)
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