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United States Environmental Protection Agency
Puget Sound Georgia Basin Ecosystem
Begin Hierarchical Links EPA Home > Region 10 > Puget Sound Georgia Basin Ecosystem > Indicators > River, Stream and Lake Quality > Why Is It happening? End Hierarchical Links

 

Why is it happening?

In its natural state, a freshwater stream or creek has its own characteristics, such as shape (meandering and wide or deep and sinewy), depth, temperature, the types of plants that thrive on its shores (the riparian zone) and in the stream itself, and the shapes, sizes and types of gravel and stones on the bottom. These conditions collectively lend themselves to the unique system of fish and other aquatic life that are in synchronicity with each other.

Stream systems are also home to a range of other wildlife such as cougars, birds, deer, elk, bear and smaller mammals such as murrulets and marmots. These natural conditions are affected by human activity on two major levels:

  • Point discharges: By law, water quality agencies issue permits to regulate industrial and municipal discharges of pollution to water. Those threshold levels are set to ensure that water quality standards are met.
  • Non-point discharges: This is often referred to as stormwater or polluted runoff, and represents the animal waste, chemicals, oils, eroded soil and all substances that are carried to freshwater streams over paved land (impervious surfaces), and bare land that has no vegetation to capture or slow these substances.

There are nearly seven million people living in the Puget Sound Georgia Basin. We enjoy this beautiful place in a vast array of recreational opportunities such as kayaking, fishing, wildlife viewing and hiking. At home, we make certain decisions regarding product choice and landscaping. At work we make thousands of decisions each year. What inventory do we purchase? How do we develop land? What chemicals do we choose to use? What energy sources do we use? By what transportation mode do we choose to travel?

Our activities are balanced by planning and protection by many types of public agencies that make decisions about how to balance the rights and interests of all seven million of us, including the rich bounty of natural life that has no political representation.

These interests and activities-the bundle of economic, community and ecological life-intersect, and in every instance, have an impact on both freshwater and marine water quality.

In addition to point source discharges from mining, manufacturing and wastewater treatment (from our millions of bathrooms), the following impact freshwater quality:

Agriculture

Chemicals, animal waste and fertilizers that are high in nitrogen and phosphorous enter groundwater and run off into freshwater streams. Of particular concern is animal waste, which contains pathogens and bacteria that are clearly incompatible with aquatic life, including shellfish (see Shellfish Indicator).

Urbanization and Construction

Traffic in the Puget SoundWhen we pave over land, we dramatically reduce the ability of vegetated land to capture and slow water that carries pollutants. In this absence, polluted water picks up speed and along the way, erodes soil, causes flooding, and causes freshwater to receive more pollutants, including heavy metals, which aquatic organisms are highly sensitive to. This leads to:

  • Pollutants in water such as home fertilizers, chemicals, oils and pollutants from vehicles
  • Higher water temperatures, which are incompatible with aquatic life
  • Increased cloudiness, measured by total suspended solids and turbidity. This interferes with photosynthesis, or the ability of light to grow food, and the presence of particles in water means they are "attachment places" for pollutants like metals and bacteria
  • Low dissolved oxygen levels (fertilizers rob the water of available oxygen aquatic life needs to live).
Failing Septic Systems

A large number of freshwater and marine water quality problems are associated with poorly designed, maintained and functioning septic systems. Raw human waste then runs directly into streams, having a serious adverse impact on human and aquatic life. Swimming in contaminated water can lead to diarrhea, hepatitis, and other diseases.

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