once the surface runoff has reached a water body if the fertilizer contains nitrogen or phosphorous it can lead to eutrophic conditions in the water that promote algae growth. the algae growth will also be effected by the amount of flushing in the water body, temperature and if the water is stagnant or has ripples/waves.
Most agricultural and lawn fertilizers cause algae to grow. Whether that is considered beneficial depends on whether algae is a desired product. Fertilizers can be intentionally applied to holding ponds to cause algae growth, while unintended fertilizer runoff can cause oxygen-depleting blooms that harm the environment.
Runoff of fertilizer can cause water pollution in nearby bodies of water, leading to algae blooms and fish kills. Excess nutrients from the fertilizer can also disrupt the balance of ecosystems and harm aquatic organisms. Additionally, runoff can contribute to the contamination of drinking water sources, posing a risk to human health.
The widespread misuse of fertilizer can lead to excessive nutrient runoff into water bodies, promoting algae overgrowth. When these algae die, their decomposition consumes oxygen, leading to oxygen depletion in the water. This imbalance in oxygen levels can negatively affect aquatic life, disrupting the normal oxygen cycle.
Yes. Algae are plants. Fertilizer is plant food.
Deforestation increases runoff. Runoff takes fertilizers into the rivers and shores that empty into the ocean. Fertilizer in the ocean increases algae. The algae consume all the oxygen thereby smothering other animals. The area become a dead zone and no little animals can cling to each other and build a coral.
Yes, it causes cellular damage, and if enough are damaged the plant will die.
The runoff from fertilizer creates algae blooms. when the algae decomposes it takes away dissolved oxygen from the water. This suffocates fish, causing dead zones. Google it. you can find tons of answers. scientific America is a reliable source. hope i helped
Less farm and industrial runoff reaches such sea: farm runoff - with high quantities of fertilizer - provides the development of oxygen-consuming algae, which depletes the oxygen and kills marine life.
Fertilizer can increase turbidity in water bodies when it washes off from fields into rivers or lakes. The nutrients in the fertilizer stimulate excessive algae growth, leading to algal blooms. When these algae die and decompose, they can increase turbidity by releasing organic matter and sediment into the water.
You can call it the nitrate fertilizer effect on algae. There is no technical term for this as there are many types of algae and fertilizers. This could be called pollution too.
When fertilizer enters the surface water in a watershed, it can lead to nutrient pollution, causing excessive growth of algae and other aquatic plants. This overgrowth, known as eutrophication, can deplete oxygen levels in the water, leading to harmful algal blooms, fish kills, and overall degradation of water quality. It can also impact human health and ecosystem balance within the watershed.
Decreasing the amount of agricultural runoff entering the water body will not increase the rate of eutrophication. Agricultural runoff contains nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus that can contribute to eutrophication by promoting excessive algae and plant growth in the water.