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WATER WORLD
Fertilizer can accumulate over time, causing water quality problems decades later
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Oct 8, 2018

Climate action urgent, says world's only 'water ambassador'
The Hague (AFP) Oct 8, 2018 - Countries must work urgently to solve water issues caused by climate change, a Dutch official billed as the world's only "water ambassador" said Monday, backing a dire warning from the UN.

Henk Ovink said nations should be planning now to anticipate future problems, from flooding or sea level rises at one end of the scale to drought and conflict over water resources at the other.

"We need a radical change," said Ovink, the special representative on water affairs for the Netherlands, who says his post is the only one of its kind in the world.

"There is this urgent need to change, the IPCC report is right, we are not heading in the right direction," he told a small group of international journalists in The Hague.

The UN's Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) said in a landmark report Monday that warming is on track toward an unliveable 3C or 4C rise and avoiding global chaos will require a major transformation.

Ovink -- who travels the world spreading the know-how gleaned by the low-lying Netherlands in its millennium-long battle against the seas -- said the report shows "we all need to do more."

Recent events such as the disastrous flooding caused by Hurricane Florence in the United States, Japanese typhoons and the Indonesian tsunami showed that "the world isn't ready for these challenges, and is responding after these crises, not before."

His job involved working with at-risk areas -- including Bangladesh, Southeast Asia and Latin America -- to help them work to anticipate problems.

He said one important area was fostering "collaboration" -- within and between countries, agencies and the UN -- citing the example of the Netherlands where "our water democracy is nearly 1,000 years old."

But while US President Donald Trump's decision to pull out of the Paris climate pact caused international dismay, Ovink said that there was no need to be unduly pessimistic.

"I don't despair only because of Trump," said Ovink, who previously served on a task force on hurricane rebuilding created by Trump's predecessor, president Barack Obama.

"The world is not dependent on one nation. It wasn't easy before Trump."

Fertilizer can accumulate over time, causing environmental damage several decades later.

In a new study, scientists quantified the maximum amount of nutrients land can hold before fertilizers overflow into downriver ecosystems. Their analysis suggests an average square mile of land can hold 1,800 pounds of phosphorus -- 2.1 metric tons per square kilometer.

"Beyond this, further phosphorus inputs to watersheds cause a significant acceleration of phosphorus loss in runoff," researchers wrote in their paper, published this week in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Nutrients like phosphorus help plants grow, but an abundance of nutrients can accelerate plant and algae growth unnaturally, disrupting ecosystems and causing environmental damage.

For their study, scientists at the University of Montreal and McGill University focused on 23 watersheds draining into Quebec's St. Lawrence River. Researchers reconstructed the history of land use within the 23 watersheds in order to calculate phosphorus accumulation.

Some of the land within the 23 watersheds is home to pristine forest, while other plots have hosted agricultural activities for decades. Fertilizer and animal manure account for most phosphorus inputs, but sewage can also contribute.

By comparing the impacts of different plots of land -- each with unique land use histories -- on water quality, scientists were able to calculate the tipping point for when overflows begin to impact downstream ecosystems.

"Think of the land as a sponge," Roxane Maranger, an aquatic ecosystem ecologist at Montreal, said in a news release. "After a while, sponges that absorb too much water will leak. In the case of phosphorus, the landscape absorbs it year after year after year, and after a while, its retention capacity is reduced. At that point historical phosphorus inputs contribute more to what reaches our water."

The new research offers a broader perspective on the problem of agricultural runoff.

"This is a very important finding," said Elena Bennett, sustainability scientist at McGill University. "It takes our farm-scale knowledge of fertilizers and pollution and scales it up to understand how whole watersheds respond within a historical context."

Because so much land in Canada, China, the United States and elsewhere is either saturated with phosphorus or close to it, scientists say more work needs to be done to develop strategies for absorbing excess nutrients.

"Instead of adding more and more to help plants grow, phosphorus already stored in soils can be accessed using new practices and approaches," said Jean-Olivier Goyette, a doctoral student in biology at the University of Montreal. "Furthermore, phosphorus can be recycled and reused as fertilizer rather than accessing more of the raw mined material."


Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics


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3D electron microscopy uncovers the complex guts of desalination membranes
University Park PA (SPX) Sep 24, 2018
Careful sample preparation, electron tomography and quantitative analysis of 3D models provides unique insights into the inner structure of reverse osmosis membranes widely used for salt water desalination wastewater recycling and home use, according to a team of chemical engineers. These reverse osmosis membranes are layers of material with an active aromatic polyamide layer that allows water molecules through, but screens out 99 to 99.9 percent of the salt. "As water stresses continue to g ... read more

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