Es Digital Notes
Es Digital Notes
Es Digital Notes
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
(R18A0014)
Unit 1: Ecosystems
Introduction
‘Environment’ is derived from the French word Environment which means to encircle or
surround.
All the biological and non-biological things surrounding an organism are thus included in
environment.
Environment is Thus defined as “the sum total of water, air and land, inter-
relationships that exist among them and with the human beings, other living organisms
and property”.
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Ecosystems:
The term Ecology was coined by Earnst Haeckel in 1869. It is derived from the Greek words
Oikos- home + logos- study. So, ecology deals with the study of organisms in their natural
home interacting with their surroundings. The surroundings or environment consists of other
living organisms (biotic) and physical (abiotic) components. Modern ecologists believe that
an adequate definition of ecology must specify some unit of study and one such basic unit
described by Tansley (1935) was ecosystem. “An ecosystem is a group of biotic communities
of species interacting with one another and with their non-living environment exchanging
energy and matter”. Now ecology is often defined as “the study of ecosystems”.
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(iv) Detritivores (Detritus feeders or Saprotrophs): They feed on the parts of dead organisms,
wastes of living organisms, their cast-offs and partially decomposed matter e.g. beetles,
termites, ants, crabs, earthworms etc.
(c) Decomposers: They derive their nutrition by breaking down the complex organic
molecules to simpler organic compounds and ultimately into inorganic nutrients. Various
bacteria and fungi are decomposers.
In all the ecosystems, this biotic structure prevails. However, in some, it is the primary
producers which predominate (e.g. in forests, agroecosystems) while in others the
decomposers predominate (e.g. deep ocean).
II. Abiotic Structure
The physical and chemical components of an ecosystem constitute its abiotic structure. It
includes climatic factors, edaphic (soil) factors, geographical factors, energy, nutrients and
toxic substances.
(a) Physical factors: The sunlight and shade, intensity of solar flux, duration of sun hours,
average temperature, maximum-minimum temperature, annual rainfall, wind, latitude and
altitude, soil type, water availability, water currents etc. are some of the important physical
features which have a strong influence on the ecosystem.
We can clearly see the striking differences in solar flux, temperature and precipitation
(rainfall, snow etc.) pattern in a desert ecosystem, in a tropical rainforest and in tundra
ecosystem.
(b) Chemical factors: Availability of major essential nutrients like carbon, nitrogen,
phosphorus, potassium, hydrogen, oxygen and sulphur, level of toxic substances, salts
causing salinity and various organic substances present in the soil or water largely influence
the functioning of the ecosystem.
FUNCTIONAL FEATURES
Every ecosystem performs under natural conditions in a systematic way. It receives energy
from the sun and passes it on through various biotic components and in fact, all life depends
upon this flow of energy.
The major functional attributes of an ecosystems are as follows:
(i) Food chain, food webs and trophic structure.
(ii) Energy flow.
(iii) Cycling of nutrients (Biogeochemical cycles).
(iv) Primary and Secondary production.
(v) Ecosystem development and regulation.
Tropic structure: The structure and functions of the ecosystem are interrelated and influence
each other. The flow of energy is mediated through a series of feeding relation ships in a
definite sequence or pattern which is known as Food chain. Nutrients too move along the
food chain. The producers and consumers are arranged in an ecosystem in a definite manner
and their interaction along with the population size is expressed together as Trophic structure.
Each food level is known as Trophic level and the amount of living matter at each Trophic
level at a given time is known as standing crop or standing biomass.
(i) FOOD CHAINS
• The sequence of eating and being eaten in an ecosystem is known as food chain.
• All organisms, living or dead, are potential food for some other organism and thus,
there is essentially no waste in the functioning of a natural ecosystem.
Some common examples of simple food chains are:
Grass → grasshopper → Frog → Snake → Hawk (Grassland ecosystem)
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Small fish
Phytoplanktons Zooplanktons
(Algae, diatoms)
Cornivorous
fish
AFig.
grazing foodfood
3.2. A grazing chain
chainin
in a pond
pondecosystem.
ecosystem
2. Detritus food chain: It starts with dead organic matter which the detritivores and
decomposers consume. Partially decomposed dead organic matter and even the decomposers
are consumed by detritivores and their predators. An example of the detritus food chain is
seen in a Mangrove (estuary) II.
Dead mangrove
tree leaves
Detritus feeders
Phytoplanktons Carnivores
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linkages and are known as food webs. Thus, “food web is a network of food chains where
different types of organisms are connected at different trophic levels, so that there are a
number of options of eating and being eaten at each trophic level.”
(a) (b)
Herbivores Birds
Producers Trees
(c)
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carnivores are hawks or other birds which are gradually less and less in number and
hence the pyramid apex becomes gradually narrower forming an upright pyramid.
• In a forest ecosystem (Fig. b), big trees are the producers, which are less in number
and hence form a narrow base. A larger number of herbivores including birds, insects
and several species of animals feed upon the trees (on leaves, fruits, flowers, bark
etc.) and form a much broader middle level. The secondary consumers like fox,
snakes, lizards etc. are less in number than herbivores while top carnivores like lion,
tiger etc. are still smaller in number. So the pyramid is narrow on both sides and
broader in the middle.
• Parasitic food chain shows (Fig. c) an inverted pyramid of number. The producers
like a few big trees harbour fruit eating birds acting like herbivores which are larger in
number. A much higher number of lice, bugs etc. grow as parasites on these birds
while a still greater number of hyper parasites like bugs, fleas and microbes feed upon
them, thus making an inverted pyramid.
b) Pyramid of biomass: It is based upon the total biomass (dry matter) at each trophic level in
a food chain. The pyramid of biomass can also be upright or inverted.
Carnivores
Squirrel, rabbit,
Herbivores
insects
Producers Grasses,
herbs
(a)
above Fig. (a, b) shows pyramids of biomass in a forest and an aquatic ecosystem. The
pyramid of biomass in a forest is upright in contrast to its pyramid of numbers. This is
because the producers (trees) accumulate a huge biomass while the consumers’ total biomass
feeding on them declines at higher trophic levels, resulting in broad base and narrowing top.
Tertiary Carnivores Big fish
Herbivores Insects
Producer
Phytoplanktons
s
(b)
The pond ecosystem shows an inverted pyramid of biomass (Fig. b). The total biomass of
producers (phytoplankton’s) is much less as compared to herbivores (zooplanktons, insects),
Carnivores (Small fish) and tertiary carnivores (big fish). Thus the pyramid takes an inverted
shape with narrow base and broad apex
c) Pyramid of Energy: The amount of energy present at each trophic level is considered for
this type of pyramid. Pyramid of energy gives the best representation of the trophic
relationships and it is always upright.
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Top carnivores
Carnivores
Herbivores
Producers
At every successive trophic level, there is a huge loss of energy (about 90%) in the form of
heat, respiration etc. Thus, at each next higher level only 10% of the energy passes on.
Hence, there is a sharp decline in energy level of each successive trophic level as we move
from producers to top carnivores. Therefore, the pyramid of energy is always upright as
shown in Fig.
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A group of solar cells joined together in a definite pattern form a solar panel which can
harness a large amount of solar energy and can produce electricity enough to run street-light,
irrigation water pump etc.
Solar cells are widely used in calculators, electronic watches, street lighting, traffic signals,
water pumps etc. They are also used in artificial satellites for electricity generation. Solar
cells are used for running radio and television also. They are more in use in remote areas
where conventional electricity supply is a problem.
(iii) Solar cooker: Solar cookers make use of solar heat by reflecting the solar radiations
using a mirror directly on to a glass sheet which covers the black insulated box within which
the raw food is kept. A new design of solar cooker is now available which involves a
spherical reflector (concave or parabolic reflector) instead of plane mirror that has more
heating effect and hence greater efficiency.
The food cooked in solar cookers is more nutritious due to slow heating. However, it has the
limitation that it cannot be used at night or on cloudy days. Moreover, the direction of the
cooker has to be adjusted according to the direction of the sun rays.
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Wind energy: The high speed winds have a lot of energy in them as kinetic energy due to
their motion. The driving force of the winds is the sun. The wind energy is harnessed by
making use of wind mills. The blades of the wind mill keep on rotating continuously due to
the force of the striking wind. The rotational motion of the blades drives a number of
machines like water pumps, flour mills and electric generators. A large number of wind mills
are installed in clusters called wind farms, which feed power to the utility grid and produce a
large amount of electricity. These farms are ideally located in coastal regions, open
grasslands or hilly regions, particularly mountain passes and ridges where the winds are
strong and steady. The minimum wind speed required for satisfactory working of a wind
generator is 15 km / hr. Natural Resources
The wind power potential of our country is estimated to be about 20,000 MW, while at
present we are generating about 1020 MW. The largest wind farm of our country is near
Kanyakumari in Tamil Nadu generating 380 MW electricity.
Wind energy is very useful as it does not cause any air pollution. After the initial installation
cost, the wind energy is very cheap. It is believed that by the middle of the century wind
power would supply more than 10% of world’s electricity.
Hydro power: The water flowing in a river is collected by constructing a big dam where the
water is stored and allowed to fall from a height. The blades of the turbine located at the
bottom of the dam move with the fast moving water which in turn rotate the generator and
produces electricity. We can also construct mini or micro hydel power plants on the rivers in
hilly regions for harnessing the hydro energy on a small scale, but the minimum height of the
waterfalls should be 10 meters. The hydropower potential of India is estimated to be about 4
ll
x l0 KW-hours. Till now we have utilized only a little more than 11% of this potential.
Hydropower does not cause any pollution, it is renewable and normally the hydro power
projects are multipurpose projects helping in controlling floods, used for irrigation,
navigation etc. However, big dams are often associated with a number of environmental
impacts .
Tidal energy: Ocean tides produced by gravitational forces of sun and moon contain
enormous amounts of energy. The ‘high tide’ and ‘low tide’ refer to the rise and fall of water
in the oceans. A difference of several meters is required between the height of high and low
tide to spin the turbines. The tidal energy can be harnessed by constructing a tidal barrage.
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During high tide, the sea-water flows into the reservoir of the barrage and turns the turbine,
which in turn produces electricity by rotating the generators. During low tide, when the sea-
level is low, the sea water stored in the barrage reservoir flows out into the sea and again
turns the turbines.
FIG 5 Water flows into the reservoir to turn the turbine at high tide (a), and flows out
from the reservoir to the sea, again turning the turbine at low tide (b).
There are only a few sites in the world where tidal energy can be suitably harnessed. The Bay
of Fundy, Canada having 17-18 m high tides has a potential of 5,000 MW of power
generation. The tidal mill at La Rance, France is one of the first modern tidal power mill. In
India, Gulf of Cambay, Gulf of Kutch and the Sunder ban deltas are the tidal power sites.
Non Renewable Energy Sources
These are the fossil fuels like coal, petroleum, natural gas and nuclear fuels. These were
formed by the decomposition of the remains of plants and animals buried under the earth
millions of years ago. The fuels are very precious because they have taken such a long time to
be formed and if we exhaust their reserves at such a fast rate as we have been doing, ever
since we discovered them, then very soon we will lose these resources forever.
Coal : Coal was formed 255-350 million years ago in the hot, damp regions of the earth
during the carboniferous age. The ancient plants along the banks of rivers and swamps were
buried after death into the soil and due to the heat and pressure gradually got converted into
peat and coal over millions of years of time. There are mainly three types of coal, namely
anthracite (hard coal), bituminous (soft coal) and lignite (brown coal). Anthracite coal has
maximum carbon (90%) and calorific value (8700 kcallkg.) Bituminous, lignite and peat
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contain 80, 70 and 60% carbon, respectively. Coal is the most abundant fossil fuel in the
world. At the present rate of usage, the coal reserves are likely to last for about 200 years
and if its use increases by 2% per year, then it will last for another 65 years.
India has about 5% of world’s coal and Indian coal is not very good in terms of heat capacity.
Major coal fields in India are Raniganj, Jharia, Bokaro, Singrauli, and Godavari valley. The
coal states of India are Jharkhand, Orissa, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh
and Maharashtra. Anthracite coal occurs only in J & K.
When coal is burnt it produces carbon dioxide, which is a greenhouse gas responsible for
causing enhanced global warming. Coal also contains impurities like sulphur and therefore as
it burns the smoke contains toxic gases like oxides of sulphur and nitrogen.
Petroleum: It is the lifeline of global economy. There are 13 countries in the world having
67% of the petroleum reserves which together form the OPEC (Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries). About 1I4th of the oil reserves are in Saudi Arabia.
At the present rate of usage, the world’s crude oil reserves are estimated to get exhausted in
just 40 years. Some optimists, however, believe that there are some yet undiscovered
reserves. Even then the crude oil
reserves will last for another 40 years or so. Crude petroleum is a complex mixture of alkane
hydrocarbons. Hence it has to be purified and refined by the process of fractional distillation,
during which process different constituents separate out at different temperatures. We get a
large variety of products from this, namely, petroleum gas, kerosene, petrol, diesel, fuel oil,
lubricating oil, paraffin wax, asphalt, plastic etc.
Petroleum is a cleaner fuel as compared to coal as it burns completely and leaves no residue.
It is also easier to transport and use. That is the reason why petroleum is preferred amongst
all the fossil fuels.
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG): The main component of petroleum is butane, the other
being propane and ethane. The petroleum gas is easily converted to liquid form under
pressure as LPG. It is odorless, but the LPG in our domestic gas cylinders gives a foul smell.
This is, in fact, due to ethyl mercaptan, a foul smelling gas, added to LPG so that any leakage
of LPG from the cylinder can be detected instantaneously.
Oil fields in India are located at Digboi (Assam), Gujarat Plains and Bombay High, offshore
areas in deltaic coasts of Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri and Mahanadi.
Natural Gas: It is mainly composed of methane (95%) with small amounts of propane and
ethane. It is a fossil fuel. Natural gas deposits mostly accompany oil deposits because it has
been formed by decomposing remains of dead animals and plants buried under the earth.
Natural gas is the cleanest fossil fuel. It can be easily transported through pipelines. It has a
high calorific value of about 50KJ/G and burns without any smoke.
Currently, the amount of natural gas deposits in the world are of the order of 80, 450 g m “.
Russia has maximum reserves (40%), followed by Iran (14%) and USA (7%). Natural gas
reserves are found in association with all the oil fields in India. Some new gas fields have
been found in Tripura, Jaisalmer, off-shore area of Mumbai and the Krishna-Godavari Delta.
Natural gas is used as a domestic and industrial fuel. It is used as a fuel in thermal power
plants for generating electricity. It is used as a source of hydrogen gas in fertilizer industry
and as a source of carbon in tyre industry.
Compressed Natural Gas (CNG): It is being used as an alternative to petrol and diesel for
transport of vehicles. Delhi has totally switched over to CNG where buses and auto rickshaws
run on this new fuel. CNG use has greatly reduced vehicular pollution in the city.
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For normal and healthy living a conducive environment is required by all the living beings,
including humans, livestock, plants, microorganisms and the wildlife.
The favourable unpolluted environment has a specific composition. When this composition
gets changed by addition of harmful substances, the environment is called polluted
environment and the substances polluting it are called pollutants.
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• Human respiratory system has a number of mechanisms for protection from air
pollution. Bigger particles (> 10 µm) can be trapped by the hairs and sticky mucus in
the lining of the nose. Smaller particles can reach tracheobronchial system and there
get trapped in mucus.
• They are sent back to throat by beating of hair like cilia from where they can be
removed by spitting or swallowing. Years of exposure to air pollutants (including
cigarette smoke) adversely affect these natural defences and can result in lung cancer,
asthma, chronic bronchitis and emphysema (damage to air sacs leading to loss of lung
elasticity and acute shortness of breath).
• Suspended particulates can cause damage to lung tissues and diseases like asthma,
bronchitis and cancer especially when they bring with them cancer causing or toxic
pollutants attached on their surface.
• Sulphur dioxide (SO2) causes constriction of respiratory passage and can cause
bronchitis like conditions.
• In the presence of suspended particulates, SO2 can form acid sulphate particles, which
can go deep into the lungs and affect them severely.
• Oxides of nitrogen especially NO2 can irritate the lungs and cause conditions like
chronic bronchitis and emphysema.
• Carbon monoxide (CO) reaches lungs and combines with haemoglobin of blood to
form carboxyhaemoglobin. CO has affinity for haemoglobin 210 times more than
oxygen. Haemoglobin is, therefore, unable to transport oxygen to various parts of
the body. This causes suffocation. Long exposure to CO may cause dizziness,
unconsciousness and even death.
• Many other air pollutants like benzene (from unleaded petrol), formaldehyde and
particulates like polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) toxic metals and dioxins (from
burning of polythene) can cause mutations, reproductive problems or even cancer.
• Hazardous materials like Asbestos, Mercury, Arsenic and radioactive materials
cause lung diseases and effect to other organs like brain, kidney, liver, heart….etc
Effects on Plants:
• Air pollutants affect plants by entering through stomata (leaf pores through which
gases diffuse), destroy chlorophyll and affect photosynthesis.
• Pollutants also erode waxy coating of the leaves called cuticle.
• Cuticle prevents excessive water loss and damage from diseases, pests, drought and
frost.
• Damage to leaf structure causes necrosis (dead areas of leaf), chlorosis (loss or
reduction of chlorophyll causing yellowing of leaf) or epinasty (downward curling of
leaf), and abscission (dropping of leaves). Particulates deposited on leaves can form
encrustations and plug the stomata. The damage can result in death of the plant.
Effects on aquatic life:
• Air pollutants mixing up with rain can cause high acidity (lower pH) in fresh water
lakes.
• This affects aquatic life especially fish. Some of the freshwater lakes have
experienced total fish death.
Control of Air pollution
Air pollution can be minimized by the following methods:
• Minimize activities which cause pollution like transportation and energy production.
• Reduction of pollution at sources.
Global Warming
• Troposphere, the lowermost layer of the atmosphere, traps heat by a natural process
due to the presence of certain gases. This effect is called Green House Effect as it is
similar to the warming effect observed in the horticultural greenhouse made of glass.
• The amount of heat trapped in the atmosphere depends mostly on the concentrations
of “heat trapping” or “greenhouse” gases and the length of time they stay in the
atmosphere. The major greenhouse gases are carbon dioxide, ozone, methane, nitrous
oxide, chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and water vapours.
• Heat trapped by greenhouse gases in the atmosphere keeps the planet warm is called
global warming.
Space
Sun
Carbon dioxide, water vapours,
methane, nitrous oxide, ozone
Heat
in the atmosphere
radiations
Solar
radiations
Re-radiated
heat radiations
Greenhouse Effect
The enhanced greenhouse effect will not only cause global warming but will also affect
various other climatic and natural processes.
(i) Global temperature increase: It is estimated that the earth’s mean temperature will rise
between 1.5 to 5.5°C by 2050 if input of greenhouse gases continues to rise at the present
rate. Even at the lower value, earth would be warmer than it has been for 10,000 years.
(ii) Rise in Sea Level: With the increase in global temperature sea water will expand.
Heating will melt the polar ice sheets and glaciers resulting in further rise in sea level.
Current models indicate that an increase in the average atmospheric temperature of 3°C
would raise the average global sea level by 0.2–1.5 meters over the next 50–100 years.
One meter rise in sea level will inundate low lying areas of cities like Shanghai, Cairo,
Bangkok, Sydney, Hamburg and Venice as well as agricultural lowlands and deltas in Egypt,
Bangladesh, India, China and will affect rice productivity. This will also disturb many
commercially important spawning grounds, and would probably increase the frequency of
storm damage to lagoons, estuaries and coral reefs.
In India, the Lakshadweep Islands with a maximum height of 4 meters above the level may
be vulnerable. Some of the most beautiful cities like Mumbai may be saved by heavy
investment on embankment to prevent inundation.
Life of millions of people will be affected, by the sea level rise who have built homes in the
deltas of the Ganges, the Nile, the Mekong, the Yangtze and the Mississippi rivers.
(iii) Effects on Human Health: The global warming will lead to changes in the rainfall
pattern in many areas, thereby affecting the distribution of vector-borne diseases like malaria,
filariasis, elephantiasis etc.
Areas which are presently free from diseases like malaria, schistosomiasis etc. may become
the breeding grounds for the vectors of such diseases. The areas likely to be affected in this
manner are Ethiopia, Kenya and Indonesia. Warmer temperature and more water stagnation
would favour the breeding of mosquitoes, snails and some insects, which are the vectors of
such diseases.
Higher temperature and humidity will increase/aggravate respiratory and skin diseases.
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(iv) Effects on Agriculture: There are different views regarding the effect of global warming
on agriculture. It may show positive or negative effects on various types of crops in different
regions of the world. Tropical and subtropical regions will be more affected since the average
temperature in these regions is already on the higher side. Even a rise of 2°C may be quite
harmful to crops. Soil moisture will decrease and evapotranspiration will increase, which may
drastically affect wheat and maize production.
Increase in temperature and humidity will increase pest growth like the growth of vectors for
various diseases. Pests will adapt to such changes better than the crops.
To cope up with the changing situation drought resistant, heat resistant and pest resistant
varieties of crops have to be developed.
Ozone Layer Depletion
For the last 450 million years the earth has had a natural sunscreen in the stratosphere called
the ozone layer. This layer filters out harmful ultraviolet radiations from the sunlight and thus
protects various life forms on the earth.
Ozone is a form of oxygen. The molecule of oxygen contains two atoms whereas that of
ozone contains three (O3). In the stratosphere ozone is continuously being created by the
absorption of short wave-length ultraviolet (UV) radiations. Ultraviolet radiations less than
242 nanometres decompose molecular oxygen into atomic oxygen (O) by photolytic
decomposition.
O2 + hv → O + O
The atomic oxygen rapidly reacts with molecular oxygen to form ozone.
O + O2 + M → O3 + M
(M is a third body necessary to carry away the energy released in the reaction).
Ozone thus formed distributes itself in the stratosphere and ab-sorbs harmful ultraviolet
radiations (200 to 320 nm) and is continuously being converted back to molecular oxygen.
O3 + hv → O2 + O
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Unit 4
WASTE MANAGEMENT
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
Solid waste (waste other than liquid or gaseous) can be classified as municipal, industrial,
agricultural, medical, mining waste and sewage sludge.
Urban waste consists of medical waste from hospitals; municipal solid wastes from homes,
offices, markets (commercial waste) small cottage units, and horticulture waste from parks,
gardens, orchards etc.
• Waste from homes (Domestic waste) contains a variety of discarded materials like
polyethylene bags, empty metal and aluminium cans, scrap metals, glass bottles,
waste paper, diapers, cloth/rags, food waste etc.
• Waste from shops mainly consists of waste paper, packaging material, cans, bottles,
polyethylene bags, peanut shells, eggshells, tea leaves etc.
• Horticulture waste and waste from slaughter houses include vegetable parts, residues
and remains of slaughtered animals, respectively.
• Industrial waste: Industrial waste consists of a large number of materials including
factory rubbish, packaging material, organic wastes, acids, alkalis and metals etc.
During some industrial processing large quantities of hazardous and toxic materials
are also produced. The main sources of industrial wastes are chemical industries,
metal and mineral processing industries. Radioactive wastes are generated by nuclear
power plants. Thermal power plants produce fly ash in large quantities. Solid wastes
from other types of industries include scrap metal, rubber, plastic, paper, glass, wood,
oils, paints, asphalt, tars, dyes, scrap leather, ceramics, abrasives, slag, heavy metals,
asbestos, batteries.
The urban solid waste materials that can be degraded by micro-organisms are called
biodegradable wastes. Examples of this type of waste are vegetable wastes, stale food, tea
leaves, egg shells, peanut shells, dry leaves etc. Wastes that cannot be degraded by micro-
organisms are called non-biodegradable wastes. For example, polyethylene bags, scrap metal,
glass bottles etc.
Municipal solid wastes heap up on the roads due to improper disposal system. People clean
their own houses and litter their immediate surroundings which affects the community
including themselves. This type of dumping allows biodegradable materials to decompose
under uncontrolled and unhygienic conditions. This produces foul smell and breeds various
types of insects and infectious organisms besides spoiling the aesthetics of the site.
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Industrial solid wastes are sources of toxic metals and hazardous wastes, which may spread
on land and can cause changes in physico-chemical and biological characteristics thereby
affecting productivity of soils. Toxic substances may leach or percolate to contaminate the
ground water.
In refuse mixing the hazardous wastes are mixed with garbage and other combustible waste.
This makes segregation and disposal all the more difficult and risky. Various types of wastes
like cans, pesticides, cleaning solvents, batteries (zinc, lead or mercury) radioactive materials,
plastics are mixed up with paper, scraps and other non-toxic materials which could be
recycled. Burning of some of these materials produce dioxins, furans and polychlorinated
biphenyls, which have the potential to cause various types of ailments including cancer.
Management of Solid Waste: For waste management we stress on ‘three R’s’-Reduce, reuse
and recycle before destruction and safe storage of wastes.
(i) Reduction in use of raw materials: Reduction in the use of raw materials will
correspondingly decrease the production of waste. Reduced demand for any metallic product
will decrease the mining of their metal and cause less production of waste.
(ii) Reuse of waste materials: The refillable containers which are discarded after use can be
reused. Villagers make casseroles and silos from waste paper and other waste materials.
Making rubber rings from the discarded cycle tubes which are used by the newspaper
vendors, instead of rubber bands, reduces the waste generation during manufacturing of
rubber bands. Because of financial constraints poor people reuse their materials to the
maximum.
(iii) Recycling of materials: Recycling is the reprocessing of discarded materials into new
useful products.
(i) Formation of some old type products e.g. old aluminium cans and glass bottles are melted
and recast into new cans and bottles.
(ii) Formation of new products: Preparation of cellulose insulation from paper, preparation of
fuel pellets from kitchen waste. Preparation of automobiles and construction materials from
steel cans.
The process of reducing, reusing and recycling saves money, energy, raw materials, land
space and also reduces pollution. Recycling of paper will reduce cutting of trees for making
fresh paper. Reuse of metals will reduce mining and melting of ores for recovery of metals
from ores and prevent pollution
(i) Sanitary landfill: In a sanitary landfill, garbage is spread out in thin layers, compacted and
covered with clay or plastic foam.
In the modern landfills the bottom is covered with an impermeable liner, usually several
layers of clay, thick plastic and sand. The liner protects the ground water from being
contaminated due to percolation of leachate. Leachate from bottom is pumped and sent for
treatment. When landfill is full it is covered with clay, sand, gravel and top soil to prevent
seepage of water. Several wells are drilled near the landfill site to monitor if any leakage is
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(ii) Composting: Due to shortage of space for landfill in bigger cities, the biodegradable yard
waste (kept separate from the municipal waste) is allowed to degrade or decompose in an
oxygen rich medium. A good quality nutrient rich and environmental friendly manure is
formed which improves the soil conditions and fertility.
(iii) Incineration: Incinerators are burning plants capable of burning a large amount of
materials at high temperature. The initial cost is very high. During incineration high levels of
dioxins, furans, lead and cadmium may be emitted with the fly ash of incinerator. Dioxin
level may reach many times more than in the ambient environment. For incineration of
materials, it is better to remove batteries containing heavy metals and plastic containing
chlorine before burning the material. Prior removal of plastics will reduce emissions of
dioxins and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).
e-WASTE MANAGEMENT
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SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
7. Integrated Land use planning: Using lands for agriculture, forestry, fodder cultivation,
industrial growth, traffic etc should be planned.
8. Creating Awareness: Creation of environmental awareness and spreading
environmental education among the people is must for fruitful results..
ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION
• Education plays a very important role in dealing with the global issue.
• Environmental Education is an integral process, which deals with man’s
interrelationship with his (natural and man made) surroundings viz., relation of
population, pollution, resource allocation, resource depletion, conservation,
technology; urban and rural planning.
• Environmental Education is intended to promote the awareness and understanding of
the environment among the citizens. Hence, Environmental Education is meant to
bring about the required changes in knowledge, understanding attitudes and skills
pertaining to the environment, conservation and ecological balance.
• So, Environmental Education must be considered as a solution for all environmental
problems and the goal of Environmental Education should be to improve and enhance
the quality of life.
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MRCET-Environmental Studies
The global population had already crossed 6 billions and may reach 8 billions by 2019 while
the per capita availability of forests, pasture lands, crop lands etc will be decreased.
Resources consumption in developed countries causes significant pollution problems,
environmental degradation and resource depletion. For eg: an average US citizen consumes
50 times as much as the average citizen of India.
Hence, there must be a holistic way of thinking regarding the management of land resources,
water resources, forest resources etc..
Over-exploitation of resources: The over-use or over-harvesting of plants, animals or natural
resources threatens the Earth’s biodiversity is called as overexploitation.
Over-exploitation causes diminishing of resources which include medicinal plants, forest
wood, grazing pastures, fish stocks, forests; water aquifers and species extinctions. If over-
exploitation is sustained, it can lead to the destruction of the environment.
Over-hunting has been a significant cause of the extinction of hundreds of species including
whales large mammals etc. Commercial hunting, both legal and illegal is the principal threat.
Deforestation, Desertification, Extinction of species; Soil erosion; Fossil fuel depletion;
Ozone depletion; increase of Green House Gases etc may arise from over-exploitation of
natural resources.
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