Evaluating Water Quality
Abiotic and Biotic Factors
What is water quality?
Appearance of the waterAbility for humans to drink and use the
waterClean enough for organisms that live in
the water
Abiotic Factors
Certain abiotic factors affect water quality. For example: pH (level of acidity/alcalinity) Turbidity (non-dissolved solids) Phosphates Temperature Dissolved Oxygen
What to know:
For each factor, make sure you know :The definition/description of the factorThe acceptable levelThe consequences if the level is not
acceptableHow to measure the level
Le pH
1. pH (p 102-103)
The pH scale measures whether a substance is acidic or basic (alcaline)
pH 1 : a strong acid (like car battery acid or your stomach acid)pH 6 : a weak acid (like milk)pH 7 : neutral – neither acidic nor basic (like distilled water)pH 8 : a weak base (like baking soda or human blood)pH 14 : a strong base (like oven cleaner or drain cleaner)
Le pH
Normal level in freshwater systems in Newfoundland and Labrador – about pH 6-6,5
Acceptable level for most aquatic organisms - between pH 5 - 8.5 (depending on the organism)
Consequences:If the water is too acidic, some organisms can’t tolerate the
conditions (do you remember range of tolerance from Grade 7?)
We measure pH with a probe, or with a universal indicator (such as in pH paper) that changes colour to show the pH according to a scale
Turbidity
2. TurbidityIf there are too many non-dissolved solids in suspension, the water
is turbid.
Normal level: little or no non-dissolved solids
Consequences: Unpleasant appearance Animals (such as fish) may not be able to see their food or
predators Prevents the Sun’s rays from penetrating the water, so plants
can’t photosynthesize The plants don’t produce enough food for themselves The plants don’t produce enough O2 for aquatic organisms
Turbidity
How to measure :a. Relative scale
Use a subjective scale from 1 to 5 - 1 is very clear and 5 is very turbid/opaque
b. Secchi discUse a black and white disk and lower it into the water. The deeper the disk can be seen, the more clear (less turbid) the water.
Secchi disc→
ecchi disc being lowered into the water →
Phosphates
3. Phosphates
Phosphates are a chemical compound that always include the elements phosphorus and oxygen. They are found in fertilizers and some detergents. They are an essential nutrient for plants.
Normal levelLess than 0.1 mg/L (0.1 ppm)
Les phosphates
Consequences:
But, if levels are too high, phosphates can cause an overproduction of plants, algae in particular (this is called eutrophication)
Eutrophication – overgrowth of algae:
This causes turbidity (look back at the consequences of that). As well, bacteria feeding on all the decomposing algae consume lots of dissolved oxygen, so other oragnisms don’t have enough
Temperature
4. TemperatureCan you remember the definition from last year?
Normal temperature of freshwater systems in Newfoundland and Labrador is between 0ºC and 18ºC
Consequences If the water is too hot or too cold, it will be outside of the range of
tolerance of many organisms and they won’t survive Of course, if the water is too cold, it will freeze!
Water temperature is, unsurprisingly, measured with a thermometer
Dissolved oxygen
4. Dissolved oxygen
Dissolved oxygen refers to the quantity of oxygen in solution in water. It can be affected by abiotic and biotic factors.
Abiotic factors that affect dissolved oxygen: Water temperature– the warmer the water, less
dissolved oxygen (why?) Turbulence – more turbulence, more dissolved oxygen
Dissolved oxygen
Biotic factors that affect dissolved oxygen Aquatic plants produce oxygen – some of it stays in
the water
Other organisms consume oxygen (fish, invertebrates, bacteria, etc.)
If there are lots of biodegradable materials in the water, decomposers will multiply and will consume lots of oxygen, so there may not be enough for other organisms (for example, too much phosphate…too many algae…lots of dying algae/plants…turbidity…lots of decomposers…less dissolved oxygen!)
Dissolved oxygen
Normal levelMost aquatic organisms need at least 5 mg/L (= 5 ppm) of dissolved
oxygen to survive – especially larger organisms such as fish.
Consequences:If there isn’t enough dissolved oxygen in the water, organisms can’t
survive.
How to measure : We mix a prepared chemical solution with a water sample.
The shade of blue it turns is compared to a number of standard samples (i.e. if it is the same shade as the bottle with 2 mg/L, that is the level of dissolved oxygen).
Biological indicators
1. Biological indicators
Some organisms can tell us something about water quality. Note: biological indicators don’t AFFECT water quality; they are AFFECTED BY the water quality.
Some organisms can tolerate less clean and more polluted water, where there isn’t lots of dissolved oxygen
Other organisms can’t survive unless the water quality is excellent – they have a narrow range of tolerance for dissolved oxygen, temperature or other pollutants
Normally, the wider the variety of insects and other aquatic invertebrates, the cleaner the water.
If we only find leeches, worms and midge larvae, the water is probably not of good quality.
Biological indicators: biotic index
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