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Marine Pollution

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Title: Marine Pollution


1
Marine Pollution
2
Marine Pollution
  • Marine pollution occurs when harmful effects, or
    potentially harmful effects can result from the
    entry into the ocean of
  • chemicals
  • particles
  • Industrial
  • agricultural
  • residential waste
  • spread of invasive organisms

3
Marine Pollution
  • Most sources of marine pollution are land based.
  • The pollution often comes from sources such as
    agricultural runoff and wind blown debris

4
Pathways of Pollution
  • There are many different ways to categorize, and
    examine the inputs of pollution into our marine
    ecosystems.

5
Pathways of Pollution
  • Generally there are four main types of inputs of
    pollution into the ocean
  • direct discharge of waste into the oceans
  • runoff into the waters due to rain
  • pollutants that are released from the atmosphere
  • ship pollution

6
Direct Discharge of Waste into the Oceans
  • Pollutants enter rivers and the sea directly from
    urban sewerage and industrial waste discharges,
    sometimes in the form of hazardous and toxic
    wastes.

7
Direct Discharge of Waste into the Oceans
  • Inland mining for copper, gold. etc., is another
    source of marine pollution.
  • Most of the pollution is simply soil, which ends
    up in rivers flowing to the sea.

8
Direct Discharge of Waste into the Oceans
  • However, some minerals discharged in the course
    of the mining can cause problems
  • such as copper, a common industrial pollutant,
    which can interfere with the life history and
    development of coral polyps

9
Surface Runoff
  • Surface runoff from farming, as well as urban
    runoff and runoff from the construction of roads,
    buildings, ports, channels, and harbours, can
    carry soil laden with carbon, nitrogen,
    phosphorus, and minerals.

10
Surface Runoff
  • This nutrient-rich water can cause fleshy algae
    and phytoplankton to thrive in coastal areas,
    known as algal blooms, which have the potential
    to create hypoxic conditions by using all
    available oxygen.

11
Surface Runoff
  • Polluted runoff from roads and highways can be a
    significant source of water pollution in coastal
    areas.

12
Occurrence of Red Tide in Philippine Bay
  • Red tide usually occurs when high organic loading
    from rivers drain into bays resulting in harmful
    algal blooms (HABs).
  • Rapid increase in population, urbanization and
    industrialization reduce the quality of
    Philippine waters.

13
  • The discharge of domestic and industrial
    wastewater and agriculture runoff has caused
    extensive pollution of the coastal water bodies.
  • This effluent is in the form or raw sewage,
    detergents, fertilizers, heavy metals, chemical
    products, oil and solid waste.

14
  • The extent of water pollution in the Philippines
    Bays can be gleaned from the frequent occurrence
    of red tide since it first came to the attention
    in 1983.

15
Ship Pollution
  • Ships can pollute waterways and oceans in many
    ways.
  • Oil spills can have devastating effects. While
    being toxic to marine life, polycyclic aromatic
    hydrocarbons (PAHs), the components in crude oil,
    are very difficult to clean up, and last for
    years in the sediment and marine environment.

16
Garbage in the Ocean
  • Solid garbage also makes its way to the ocean.
  • Plastic bags, balloons, glass bottles, shoes,
    packaging material - if not disposed of
    correctly, almost everything we throw away can
    reach the sea.

17
Garbage in the Ocean
  • Plastic garbage, which decomposes very slowly, is
    often mistaken for food by marine animals.
  • High concentrations of plastic material,
    particularly plastic bags, have been found
    blocking the breathing passages and stomachs of
    many marine species, including whales, dolphins,
    seals, puffins, and turtles.
  • Plastic six-pack rings for drink bottles can also
    choke marine animals.

18
Toxic Chemicals
  • Almost every marine organism, from the tiniest
    plankton to whales and polar bears, is
    contaminated with man-made chemicals, such as
    pesticides and chemicals used in common consumer
    products.

19
Toxic Chemicals
  • Some of these chemicals enter the sea through
    deliberate dumping.
  • For centuries, the oceans have been a convenient
    dumping ground for waste generated on land.
  • This continued until the 1970s, with dumping at
    sea the accepted practise for disposal of nearly
    everything, including toxic material such as
    pesticides, chemical weapons, and radioactive
    waste.

20
Toxic Chemicals
  • Dumping of the most toxic materials was banned by
    the London Dumping Convention in 1972, and an
    amended treaty in 1996 (the London Convention)
    further restricted what could be dumped at sea.
  • However, there are still the problems of
    already-dumped toxic material, and even the
    disposal of permitted substances at sea can be a
    substantial environmental hazard.

21
Toxic Chemicals
  • Chemicals also enter the sea from land-based
    activities.
  • Chemicals can escape into water, soil, and air
    during their manufacture, use, or disposal, as
    well as from accidental leaks or fires in
    products containing these chemicals.
  • Once in the environment, they can travel for long
    distances in air and water, including ocean
    currents.

22
Toxic Chemicals
  • People once assumed that the ocean was so large
    that all pollutants would be diluted and
    dispersed to safe levels.
  • But in reality, they have not disappeared - and
    some toxic man-made chemicals have even become
    more concentrated as they have entered the food
    chain.

23
Toxic Chemicals
  • Tiny animals at the bottom of the food chain,
    such as plankton in the oceans, absorb the
    chemicals as they feed.
  • Because they do not break down easily, the
    chemicals accumulate in these organisms, becoming
    much more concentrated in their bodies than in
    the surrounding water or soil.
  • These organisms are eaten by small animals, and
    the concentration rises again.
  • These animals are in turn eaten by larger
    animals, which can travel large distances with
    their even further increased chemical load.

24
Oil Spill
  • An oil spill is the release of a liquid petroleum
    hydrocarbon into the environment due to human
    activity, and is a form of pollution.

25
Oil Spill
  • The term often refers to marine oil spills, where
    oil is released into the ocean or coastal waters.

26
Oil Spill
  • The oil may be a variety of materials, including
    crude oil, refined petroleum products (such as
    gasoline or diesel fuel) or by-products, ships'
    bunkers, oily refuse or oil mixed in waste.

27
Oil Spill
  • Spills take months or even years to clean up.
  • Oil also enters the marine environment from
    natural oil seeps.
  • Most human-made oil pollution comes from
    land-based activity, but public attention and
    regulation has tended to focus most sharply on
    seagoing oil tankers.

28
Environmental Effects of Oil Spill
  • The oil penetrates and opens up the structure of
    the plumage of birds, reducing its insulating
    ability, and so making the birds more vulnerable
    to temperature fluctuations and much less buoyant
    in the water.

29
Environmental Effects of Oil Spill
  • It also impairs birds' flight abilities, making
    it difficult or impossible to search for food and
    escape from predators.

30
Environmental Effects of Oil Spill
  • As they attempt to clean, birds typically ingest
    oil that covers their feathers, causing kidney
    damage, altered liver function, and digestive
    tract irritation.
  • This and the limited foraging ability quickly
    causes dehydration and metabolic imbalances.
    intervention.

31
Environmental Effects of Oil Spill
  • Hormonal balance alteration including changes in
    luteinizing protein can also result in some birds
    exposed to petroleum.
  • Most birds affected by an oil spill die unless
    there is human

32
Environmental Effects of Oil Spill
  • Marine mammals exposed to oil spills are affected
    in similar ways as seabirds.

33
Environmental Effects of Oil Spill
  • Oil coats the fur of Sea otters and seals,
    reducing its insulation abilities and leading to
    body temperature fluctuations and hypothermia.
  • Ingestion of the oil causes dehydration and
    impaired digestions.

34
Environmental Effects of Oil Spill
  • Because oil floats on top of water, less light
    penetrates into the water, limiting the
    photosynthesis of marine plants and
    phytoplankton.
  • This, as well as decreasing the fauna
    populations, affects the food chain in the
    ecosystem.

35
Guimaras Oil Spill
  • The oil tanker M/T Solar I, carrying more than
    two million liters of bunker fuel, sank on August
    11, 2006 at the Guimaras Strait off the coast of
    the Guimaras and Negros Occidental provinces
  • Causing some 500,000 liters of oil to pour into
    the strait.
  • Siphoning the remaining 1.5 million liters from
    the sunken tanker, at a depth of more than 600
    meters, was scheduled for last March 2007

36
Guimaras Oil Spill
  • The Guimaras oil spill is an ongoing
    environmental and economic disaster that started
    on August 11, 2006.
  • It is dubbed as the worst oil spill the
    Philippines had ever seen.

37
Guimaras Oil Spill
  • It has been said and said about the recent oil
    spill which has now adversely affected marine
    sanctuaries and mangrove reserves in three out of
    five municipalities in Guimaras Island and
    reached the shores of Iloilo and Negros
    Occidental.

38
Guimaras Oil Spill
  • The oil spill occurred in the Visayas Sea which
    is considered a rich fishing ground that supplies
    most of the fisheries demand for the entire
    country. (NDCC, August 2006)

39
Effects of Oil Spill
  • The spill has damaged Taklong Island National
    Marine Reserve, a marine sanctuary for feeding
    and breeding ground for fish and other species.

40
Guimaras Oil Spill
  • Dr. Jose Ingles, eco-region coordinator of the
    World Wide Fund for Nature in the Philippines,
    Indonesia and Malaysia, said that the damage may
    be felt by at least two generations.
  • He warned that the disaster may have damaged the
    reefs and mangroves, scarring the ecosystem and
    causing seafood yields to significantly decrease.
  • According to him, the worst hit would be the
    shorelines, the coasts and the swamplands with
    mangroves.

41
Guimaras Oil Spill
  • In the south-southeast of the spill site is
    located the Sulu Sea, a deep water area
    frequented by commercially valued fishes.
  • The towns of southern Negros Occidental province
    prides themselves as the home of the Blue Marlin
    and the Yellow Fin Tuna.
  • This is an important source of income for the
    communities.
  • If the slick is not effectively contained, this
    will surely damage this thriving local industry.

42
Marine Pollution
  • Another pathway of pollution occurs through the
    atmosphere.
  • Wind blown dust and debris, including plastic
    bags, are blown seaward from landfills and other
    areas.

43
Ocean Acidification
  • The oceans are normally a natural carbon sink,
    absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
  • Because the levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide
    are increasing, the oceans are becoming more
    acidic.

44
Ocean Acidification
  • The potential consequences of ocean acidification
    are not fully understood
  • There are concerns that structures made of
    calcium carbonate may become vulnerable to
    dissolution
  • Affecting corals and the ability of shellfish to
    form shells.

45
Ocean Acidification
  • Oceans and coastal ecosystems play an important
    role in the global carbon cycle and have removed
    about 25 of the carbon dioxide emitted by human
    activities between 2000 and 2007 and about half
    the anthropogenic CO2 released since the start of
    the industrial revolution.

46
Ocean Acidification
  • Rising ocean temperatures and ocean acidification
    means that the capacity of the ocean carbon sink
    will gradually get weaker
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