{UAH} Wastewater treatment boom changes essential nutrient balance in lakes
Friends
This is why Africans are failing, this is why blacks are failing. Instead of defending their resources they pick projects built by their looters and sell them as success among themselves. It is a play to we must be like whites. Can you simply imagine how far blacks would have gone, if Abbey Semuwemba built a forum, and Barigye uses it to attack Norway loot to Somalia? Can you imagine how many lives UAH would have saved in Africa? Lok at Somalia today, a country devastated into poverty and never ending wars, in fact they are glad Donald was elected, for under Obama by this time half Somalis would have been dead anyways. But can you vision if we would use this forum to attack Norway looting African coast? No for we use it to preach how whites are better than us to loot Somalia and build a firkin water treatment. If you cannot attack Norway piracy in UAH what other gun do you have?
God so sad you created me firkin black, a bunch of firkin dorpies.
EM -> { Trump for 2020 }
On the 49th Parallel
Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in anarchy"
Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni katika machafuko"
From: ugandans-at-heart@googlegroups.com <ugandans-at-heart@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Allan
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2020 6:27 PM
To: UAH <ugandans-at-heart@googlegroups.com>
Subject: {UAH} Wastewater treatment boom changes essential nutrient balance in lakes
Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA)
Wastewater is proven to play the most significant role in causing the nitrogen/phosphorus changes in Chinese lakes. Imbalance of nutrient status may facilitate the growth of toxic cyanobacteria. Credit: Weijiang Chen
A vast number of new wastewater treatment plants in developing countries has led to an imbalance between phosphorous and nitrogen in surface waters. The result could be excessive growth of potentially poisonous algae with a preference for nitrogen. A new study calls for better nutrient reduction in order to maintain ecosystem biodiversity in lakes and others surface waterbodies.
As one of the U.N.'s 17 sustainable development goals, clean water and sanitation receives a lot of attention. In order to reach this comprehensive goal, efficient municipal wastewater management plays a major role. Most human activities produce wastewater—and the annual production of municipal wastewater worldwide now exceeds the amount as the water released by the enormous Amazon river to the Atlantic Ocean in roughly 12 days.
"The volume of wastewater is continuing to grow with urbanization and the associated population increase. Increasing wastewater production, together with inadequate collection and treatment facilities, have led to negative impacts on water quality," NIVA researcher Yan Lin said.
According to Lin, many developing countries are addressing the issue by fast construction of new wastewater treatment plants.
"The difference in nitrogen and phosphorus removal efficiency, however, has resulted in imbalance of nitrogen relative to phosphorus in water bodies. This may have negative implications for biodiversity and overall functioning of the receiving aquatic ecosystem," Lin said.
In this article, we will look closer on nitrogen and phosphorous and these two elements' impact on aquatic ecosystems. Both nitrogen and phosphorus are essential elements for organisms to grow. However, as excessive nutrients may cause eutrophication of waterbodies, it is very important to control the nutrient fluxes into these waters.
Wastewater treatment boom in China
Many countries are tackling the problem of excess nutrients by increasing municipal wastewater treatment capacity. This is often more achievable than reducing nonpoint nutrient sources, for instance through reducing fertilizer application rates and watershed conservation practice. In China, which will be in focus in this article, the construction of wastewater treatment plants has grown rapidly in the last fifteen years.
In 2005, the percentage of municipal wastewater being treated on a national scale in China was only about 40 %. In 2017, it reached more than 90 %.
However, the results of this shift of measures in relation to nutrient concentrations in lakes are unknown.
May lead to algae blooms
In the PNAS publication "Improvement in municipal wastewater treatment alters lake nitrogen to phosphorus ratios in populated regions," a broad consortium of scientists, including experts from Norwegian Institute of Water Research (NIVA) show that this municipal wastewater treatment boom in China is a major driver for increases in nitrogen/phosphorous mass ratios in the country's lakes. This is especially significant in the more populated Eastern China.
The main reason is that phosphorus is more effectively removed than nitrogen from wastewater in most of the current wastewater treatment plants, the researchers argue.
"We investigated the changes of the nutritional status of 46 major lakes in China. While the water in general is becoming cleaner, the findings show that the phosphorus is decreasing at a much faster pace," NIVA researcher Lin said.
The results show that in the past decade, phosphorus concentration in most lakes in eastern China has dropped significantly. Nitrogen concentration, on the other hand, has been mostly stable. Thus, the ratio of nitrogen to phosphorus has kept on increasing.
According to Lin, this can bring some unexpected consequences for the functioning of aquatic food webs, such as the increasing prevalence of certain types of cyanobacteria in the eutrophic lakes.
"Our findings highlight the need for more efficient nitrogen reduction in addition to phosphorus reduction in wastewater treatment to reduce the risk for phytoplankton blooms and toxin production and to maintain ecosystem biodiversity in downstream waterbodies," Lin said.
Good balance essential
Not familiar with the term nutrient stoichiometry? The term can be described as a science that explores the balance of important life elements such as carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus in various ecological processes. Its core is to reveal the impact of changes in the living environment and biological element composition on the overall function of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
Just as humans thrive best on a diet with a good balance between carbohydrates, protein and fat, nature also has certain preferences. A good balance between nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorous is essential.
To maintain healthy waters with good biodiversity, wastewater treatment plants have been installed to prevent too many nutrients being deposited in nature. However, in the fresh PNAS paper the researchers argue that it is due time for the wastewater treatment plants to develop more efficient nitrogen removal technologies.
"Mastering the long-term evolution of the stoichiometric characteristics of nitrogen and phosphorus in waterbodies is a prerequisite for clarifying changes in primary productivity of aquatic ecology and discovering potential drivers of negative ecological consequences," Lin said.
Call for new regulations
The NIVA researcher argues that the project's results should be taken into account when evaluating the implementation of environmental management measures and formulating future nutrient management and control goals.
"The growing imbalance between nitrogen and phosphorous has important implications for aquatic ecology that remain poorly considered and understood," Lin said.
"The current regulations need to be updated to include the nutrient stoichiometry parameters rather than single nutrient limit values," he said.
In particular, the results of the study should have great implications for wastewater treatment policy making in developing countries, where massive infrastructure developments, including wastewater treatment plants, are undergoing.
"The design of wastewater treatment plants should more efficiently reduce nitrogen in addition to phosphorus, in order to keep the nitrogen/phosphorus mass ratio at balance," Lin concluded
https://phys.org/news/2020-06-wastewater-treatment-boom-essential-nutrient.html
Allan
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