Browse Topics
Water Quality in the Natural Environment

Water Pollution Reduction

Over the last several decades, water quality management in the United States has focused on control of point sources of pollution and the use of effluent- (discharge-) based water quality standards. Although the quality of U.S. waters has generally improved, nonpoint sources of pollution have not been as successfully controlled. To help confront this disparity, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) implements the Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) program'the objective of which is attainment of ambient water quality standards through the control of both point and nonpoint sources of pollution. Produced in response to a request from the U.S. Congress, Assessing the Total Maximum Daily Load Approach to Water Quality Management recommends two major programmatic changes in the TMDL process.

Over the past 20 years, scientists, coastal managers, and government decision-makers have come to recognize that coastal ecosystems suffer a number of environmental problems that can, at times, be attributed to the introduction of excess nutrients from upstream watersheds. Nutrient over-enrichment [view report] is the common thread linking such diverse coastal problems as fish kills, outbreaks of shellfish poisonings, coral reef destruction, and the Gulf of Mexico's "dead zone." Nutrient sources [view report] include runoff from agricultural land, animal feeding operations, and urban areas as well as discharge from wastewater treatment plants and atmospheric deposition of compounds released during the burning of fossil fuels. Clean Coastal Waters: Understanding and Reducing the Effects of Nutrient Pollution [view report], produced jointly by the WSTB and the Ocean Studies Board of the NRC, concludes that the federal government together with state and local agencies should develop a comprehensive national strategy to combat nitrogen and phosphorus pollution in coastal waters [view report]. Success in addressing coastal nutrient problems depends on having a solid scientific understanding of the causes of the problem and the full range of possible management alternatives. To this end, the report describes a number of initiatives that could help address nutrient overabundance.
Books Related to Review of Water Pollution Reduction
Click on a book for more information.


Clean Coastal Waters: Understanding and Reducing the Effects of Nutrient Pollution,



Assessing the Total Maximum Daily Load Approach to Water Quality Management,



Regional Cooperation for Water Quality Improvement in Southwestern Pennsylvania,



CLEANER and NSF's Environmental Observatories,



Mississippi River Water Quality and the Clean Water Act: Progress, Challenges, and Opportunities,



Urban Stormwater Management in the United States,











Explore the Books:
Search Books Related to Water Pollution Reduction

Enter your terms:
OR
Click on a pre-selected key phrase:
adaptive implementation
adverse impacts
agricultural practices
algal bloom
algal blooms
animal feeding
aquatic vegetation
atmospheric nitrogen
basin approach
biological criteria
bottom waters
chesapeake bay
classification scheme
classification schemes
clean air
clean coastal
coastal ecosystems
coastal eutrophication
coastal nutrient
coastal ocean
coastal regions
coastal water
coastal watersheds
coastal zone
combined sewer
conservation reserve
conservation service
continental shelf
controlling eutrophication
coral reef
coral reefs
deposition program
dissolved organic
drinking water
ecosystem research
environmental monitoring
estuarine eutrophication
estuarine research
estuarine susceptibility
eutrophication assessment
feeding operations
fertilizer application
fossil fuel
fossil fuels
hudson river
impaired waters
increased nitrogen
inorganic nitrogen
management approaches
management strategies
marine ecosystem
marine ecosystems
marine environment
mississippi river
narragansett bay
national estuarine
national monitoring
national ocean
national science
national strategy
nationwide urban
natural resource
nitrogen availability
nitrogen deposition
nitrogen export
nitrogen fertilizer
nitrogen fixation
nitrogen input
nitrogen inputs
nitrogen limitation
nitrogen loading
nitrogen project
nitrogen removal
nutrient concentration
nutrient criteria
nutrient cycling
nutrient enrichment
nutrient input
nutrient inputs
nutrient load
nutrient loading
nutrient loadings
nutrient management
nutrient overenrichment
nutrient pollution
nutrient source
nutrient sources
organic enrichment
organic nitrogen
phosphorus loss
phytoplankton biomass
primary production
primary productivity
quality improvement
quality incentives
receiving waters
red tides
reduce nitrogen
reducing nutrient
resource managers
rotating basin
sewer overflow
shellfish poisoning
simulation models
soil phosphorus
source reduction
source reductions
spatial scales
stormwater runoff
submerged aquatic
surface runoff
terrestrial ecosystems
tmdl development
urban runoff
urban stormwater
voluntary approach
water clarity
water management
water residence
zone management