Water Pollution (CIE IGCSE Biology)

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Untreated Sewage & Excess Fertiliser

  • Human activities have led to the pollution of land, water and air
  • Pollution comes from a variety of sources, including industry and manufacturing processes, waste and discarded rubbish, chemicals from farming practices, nuclear fall-out, and untreated sewage

 Land, Water & Air Pollution table, IGCSE & GCSE Biology revision notes

Eutrophication: Extended

  • Runoff of fertiliser from farmland enters the water and causes increased growth of algae and water plants
  • The resulting ‘algal bloom’ blocks sunlight so water plants on the bottom start to die, as does the algae when competition for nutrients becomes too intense
  • As water plants and algae die in greater numbers, decomposing bacteria increase in number and use up the dissolved oxygen whilst respiring aerobically
  • As a result there is less oxygen dissolved in water, so aquatic organisms such as fish and insects may be unable to breathe and would die

Eurtrophication, IGCSE & GCSE Biology revision notesSequence of events causing eutrophication in lakes and rivers

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Phil

Author: Phil

Phil has a BSc in Biochemistry from the University of Birmingham, followed by an MBA from Manchester Business School. He has 15 years of teaching and tutoring experience, teaching Biology in schools before becoming director of a growing tuition agency. He has also examined Biology for one of the leading UK exam boards. Phil has a particular passion for empowering students to overcome their fear of numbers in a scientific context.