Water Quality Testing and Training at Berks Nature

The Entrance to Berks Nature

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Drip Gang Working Together to Test for important things like Phosphate and Nitrate levels in a Water Sample

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On February 22nd 2019 our team, the Drip Gang, attended our training at the Berks Nature facility, hosted by Education and Watershed Specialist, Michael J. Griffith. During our training we learned about the importance of testing the qualities of water, and we specifically learned about the techniques and tools used to test effectively and accurately for Water Temperature, PH levels, Nitrate, Ion and Phosphate levels in a water sample. After completing our training and setting up and learning to use our GLOBE ( Global Learning and Observations to Benefit the Environment ) accounts, our group is now ready to visit and officially test local watersheds for valuable data that can be used to contribute to and improve the overall quality of water in Berks County and other local areas!

Signing Off on our project (earth Avengers)

In conclusion our team did give its final presentation to the class, which covered e-waste, recycling, how waste is disposed, how waste is reinvented into coal in Kenya and finally our EEACAP project. The whole experience was an exciting one, from volunteering at Blue Marsh to our earth day presentation, basically given an insight to our course mates and the whole student and faculty body on all the activities we had engaged in from picking litter and trail hiking. During our litter task, we got see the different waste left on the roadside, from bottles, plastic  caps, plastic bags, cigarettes and even dead birds and snakes. Are people deliberately dropping these items or just not caring? Are the birds dying from choking or swallowing these bottle caps and other foreign objects? The trail yoga gave as the opportunity to see nature, from the woods, lakes and also eagles. This project gave my teammates and I the opportunity to be able to learn about the importance of recycling, the harm of plastic products loitering around and also the harm it causes to animals and the environment

Final Post Earth Huggers 5/3/2015

Hello everyone! This is the final presentation on our research and our action to help the environment. Blue Marsh and Road Salt Presentation.

Everyone from Earth Huggers really appreciates the support from the EACAP website here and all the students at Penn State Berks. The experience was amazing and unique. Our group wishes the best of luck to all the future students of Prof. Kazempour who will be helping the environment.

Enjoy your summer everyone!

– Earth Huggers

Final Post (Fantastic Four) 5/3/15

It’s been a fun semester, and we would like to thank everyone that’s been involved including Professor Kazempour and Kathleen from Blue Marsh. We learned a lot during this project. It takes a lot of hard work to keep a place like Blue Marsh going. Just in case you would like to help out, you can contact them at : 610-376-6337. We also learned a lot from out research of Fracking. Its hard to believe that in total they use 72 trillion gallons of water and pump 360 billion chemicals into the ground, which by the way are mostly non biodegradable! ill leave you with this question, is the environmental impact caused by Fracking really worth the economic gain? Thanks again for such a great Semester!

 

Marvel’s final post on May 2, 2015

It’s been a great semester, and thank you for following our posts throughout the semester, and a special thank you to our Professor Kazempour for giving us an opportunity to work on our research project- E-waste and volunteer at Blue Marsh Lake.
On April 26, we had our class presentation to show the class what we had done with our research on E-waste and our progress with Blue Marsh Lake. It’s been a fun experience, and we gained environmental awareness from our project and we are proud of our contribution to the community.
Even though the semester has ended, we won’t stop saving our environment, and hopefully you have gained some insight from following our posts and the other teams’. Remember, we only have one Earth, and it’s our job to save it. Go Sustainability!!!

Team Marvels.

Yvonne, Bruce, Lili, Maggie

Final Post (Team CAKE) 5/1/2015

Team CAKE would like to first of all thank everyone who has been keeping up with our posts on this site.  We would also like to thank Dr. K as well as Kathy at Blue Marsh Lake for giving us the opportunity to spend time volunteering and helping out the community.  We had a lot of fun during our work day as well as in class in general.  We learned a lot about the pacific trash vortex and enjoyed sharing our research with our classmates.  We also enjoyed hearing everyone else’s presentations in class over the past week.

-Team CAKE

(Callie, Aly, Kyle and Eric)

Farewell from (Team Blue Marsh) April 30th, 2015

Team Blue Marsh finished up our community service work within the last few weeks! We finished up what we could with the rotting railroad ties, and from there Lauren and Lindsay worked to landscape around the community service building! We both landscaped on a beautiful day and enjoyed watching the transformation as we cleared the overgrown plants, and weeds. On Saturday April 18th, there was a community cleanup day at Blue Marsh and volunteers helped to finish the landscaping, and added mulch to finish the project!

Throughout the semester our team also researched types of Water Pollution, causes, effects, and solutions. Here is some of the data that we found:

What is water pollution?

Water pollution is any chemical, physical or biological change in the quality of water that has a harmful effect on any living organism that depends on water to survive.  Water pollution affects the entire biosphere, which include plants and organisms living in theses bodies of water. The effect is damaging not only to the individual species and population, but also to the natural biological communities.

Causes of Water Pollution:

Sewage/Wastewater: Wastewater is usually comprised of feces, urine, and laundry waste, which then runs to rivers, lakes and other bodies of water. Therefore, treating water should be a huge priority in all countries. The contaminants in untreated wastewater going to the environments in which they reside causes different types of diseases and increased health problems in these areas.

Marine Dumping: Marine dumping includes dumping litter/trash into the ocean, which obviously poses major concerns. Fish and other animals can possibly get caught or suffocated in different plastic pollutants. Marine dumping is so crucial to pay attention to because it takes about 200 years for aluminium and 400 years for different plastics to decompose in our environments.

Radioactive Waste: Radioactive waste is produced in facilities that use radioactive material and is very harmful to the environment if not disposed of properly.

radioactive waste

Eutrophication/Farm Runoff: Eutrophication is when the environment becomes enriched with extra nutrients, which causes these nutrients to run off into the water. These nutrients in the water cause phytoplankton to grow and reproduce more rapidly, which causes increased algae blooms in the water. The algae then uses most of the oxygen in the water, which results in death of many aquatic organisms such as fish and invertebrates. The algae blooms may also block sunlight from plants living underneath.

Oil Pollution: Oil spills in oceans happen on a daily basis due to oil leaks, runoffs, and dumping. Oil spills cause many local problems where it is spilled. It can also spread and affect marine wildlife and birds miles away. Oil does not dissolve in water, therefore it creates a sludge barrier on top of the water. This coating of oil suffocates fish underneath the water surface, blocks sunlight from underwater plants, and gets in bird’s feathers, which causes the bird to be flightless.

OilSoakBird

Industrial Waste: Many industrial facilities use freshwater to carry away their waste into nearby rivers and oceans. These pollutants may include non-biodegradable materials including mercury, petrochemicals, and lead.

Storage Leaks: There are many storage tanks and a large piping networks underneath the ground that store and and move petroleum products across the country. These networks and tanks that were constructed before the 1980’s were made out of steel, which are directly exposed to the environment causing leakages. These leakages contaminate nearby soils that run off into watersheds.

Atmospheric Deposition: Atmospheric decomposition is water pollution caused by air pollution. Air pollution gets mixed with water particles in the atmosphere and when it rains these pollutants are back into the water system.

chembook_environchem_graphik_3b

Global Warming: Surprisingly global warming is one of the causes of  water pollution. As the temperature rises on Earth, many aquatic organisms die, which disrupts all marine habitats and their respective ecosystems.Therefore global warming is an effect of different types of pollution, but also contributes to water pollution as well. It is a cause and an effect of pollution.

Effects of Water Pollution:

Whether you believe it or not water pollution affects everyone and everything in our environment including humans, animals, marine life, and the environment itself.

Humans: Contaminated water leads to water borne diseases (cholera and tuberculosis). In developed countries toxins can still be in the water supply, which can cause rashes and stomach aches.

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Animals: 

Water pollutants in water can kill certain animals. These holes in the food chain leads to problems throughout the entire ecosystem. Pollutants in smaller animals that are eaten by bigger ones travels all the to the secondary consumers of these animals, which in most cases are humans.

Marine Life:

Nearly one ton of plastic waste material ends up in the ocean  every year. Much of this plastic waste is consumed by marine life that mistake it with food. Animals also get tangled and trapped in plastic bags, balloons, medical waste, soda cans, and milk cartons. Trash can cause entanglement, starvation, drowning, and strangulation.Often, toxins like mercury are released into the water, which fall to the ocean floor and are consumed by bottom feeders. When toxic materials are introduced into marine animals habitat it can cause behavioral abnormalities, cancer, lesions, death and reproductive changes.

Environment:

Pollutants travel downstream flowing into all waters and ecosystems connected to that pollution area.This promotes overgrowth of algae which can overtake the ecosystem and effect the other animals and the food chain. Every single thing we do as a human population affects our environment in some sort of way, which is why it is important to recognize our role on Earth. Therefore we should do the best we possibly can to help protect our fragile environment.

environment

Solutions:

There are many things that each and every one of us can do to help keep our waters clean:

Conserve water by turning off the tap when running water is not necessary

Use environment friendly cleaning products

Use reusable water bottles and bags

Don’t litter and pick up litter if you see any

Be careful what chemicals or paints you rinse down the drains

Reduce amount of fertilizers and pesticides

Always recycle when possible

As far as Industrial water pollution goes, there needs to be more legislation concerning water pollution with the focus on the effects of waste on our environment.The regulations should educate these companies on how reducing waste can actually have a mutual beneficial result in the company as well as the environment.

 

Team Blue Marsh would like to thank everybody for keeping up with our blog and checking back to see what we are up to! We look forward to seeing posts from groups in the future! Thanks again from Lauren, Lindsay, Darby, and Nathan!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Last day at Blue Marsh for Team ABS! April 28, 2015

On our last day at Blue Marsh Lake, we got the opportunity to visit the control tower to see how the dam operated. We went into the tower and all the way to the bottom, 350 feet underneath the water. Here we learned exactly what each part of the dam did and how it contributed to helping the flooding of the Susquehanna Valley and parts of the Tulpehocken. We then spent the last hour and a half weeding and mulching the front of the ranger station making it look brand new again.

We really enjoyed our time volunteering at Blue Marsh Lake and look forward to visiting again in the future! We hope you all enjoyed following our posts, videos, and our journey!

Please view our PowerPoint to find out more information on Blue Marsh and our environmental issue of Beached Pilot Whales in New Zealand! Click Here: EACAP

Watch this video to see all that we did: Last Day! click here

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Project Showcase (Team CAKE) 4/21/15

As a celebration of Earth Week (April 20-24), BiSci3 students had the opportunity to showcase our research and service projects to fellow students, as well as faculty, staff, and community partners. It was great to finally learn more about the projects our classmates have been working on throughout the semester, as well as see our own work as a finished project. Team CAKE will be giving a presentation on the Pacific Trash Vortex and our work at Blue Marsh Lake on Thursday, 4/23 during our class period.