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Water Quality - Surface Water Program
When analyzing the quality of surface waters, there are many factors to consider. Guidelines have been established for certain parameters such as bacteriological and nutrient levels, which can indicate if pollution is adversely affecting the area where a water sample was collected. Two types of pollution affect our surface waters: Point source, and non-point source pollution. Point source pollution is identifiable as a specific discharge from industrial facilities, landfills, septic systems, sewage treatment plants, and other facilities. Non-point source pollution includes storm water and other sources which are non-specific, the actual sources of this type of pollution are unlikely to be determined. Storm water is the runoff from developed urban and agricultural areas. As rainfall flows across yards, streets, parking lots, animal lots and fields, it picks up many contaminants, dumping them into waterways and wetlands through storm drains, pipes and ditches. In both urban and agricultural storm water, elevated nitrogen and phosphorus levels are discharged into the receiving water body from fertilizers and animal wastes that alter the natural balance of these nutrients.These elevated nutrient levels result in the growth of algae, which can ultimately lead to oxygen depletion in the water and kill aquatic life. Agricultural storm water runoff is especially serious when it enters slow-moving rivers or bodies of water with little or no water circulation such as canals and lakes. Even rainfall can act as a non-point source pollutant when it becomes acidic (‘acid rain’) as a result of sulfates and nitrates being released into the air from auto exhausts and industrial emissions. Executive Summary | Surface Water Program | Water Quality Index | Glossary |
Volusia
County Health Department | Volusia County
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Volusia County Health Department |