sediment and bacterial pollution
Bacterial pollution because it's talking about microbes.
N. M. Horn has written: 'Effects of air pollution and acid rain on fungal and bacterial diseases of trees' -- subject(s): Effect of pollution on, Acid rain, Diseases and pests, Pollution, Trees, Air
you blow up and you die.
the answer is actually nutrient pollution because it says what "POLLUTION" is whatever so the answer would be nutrient pollution because if you read the question you can break it up into some words so the word "pollution" is telling you it has something to do with pollution so therefore the answer is: Answer: Nutrient Pollution
Bacterial
Nutrient and bacterial. But if you had to pick one it is definitely Nutrient.
L. G. Palamuleni has written: 'Bacteriological contamination of water in urban poor areas' -- subject(s): Bacterial pollution of water
James F. McNabb has written: 'Nutrient, bacterial, and virus control as related to ground-water contamination' -- subject(s): Groundwater, Pollution
Pollution ,Pollution, Pollution, Pollution, Pollution, Pollution ,Pollutionand Pollution.
Ruminant animals (cows etc.) have a bacterial population in their intestines that produces methane as it digests cellulose. The methane is emitted to the atmosphere. Methane is a greenhouse gas impacts global warming.
Jerri V. Davis has written: 'Water-quality assessment of the Ozark Plateaus study unit, Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma' -- subject(s): Bacterial pollution of water, Environmental aspects, Environmental aspects of Nitrates, Groundwater, Nitrates, Nutrient pollution of water, Organic water pollutants, Pollution, Suspended sediments, Water quality 'Assessment of possible sources of microbiological contamination and water-quality characteristics of the Jacks Fork, Ozark National Scenic Riverways, Missouri--phase II' -- subject(s): Bacterial pollution of water, Water quality 'Water-quality characterization of the Spring River basin, southwestern Missouri and southeastern Kansas' -- subject(s): Water quality