| Item | Key Features | Notes / Differences |
|---|---|---|
| Point Source | Single, identifiable pollution source | Factory, wastewater plant |
| Non-Point Source | Diffuse, hard to regulate | Runoff, agriculture, unmanaged land |
| Eutrophication | Nutrient overload causes algae, toxins | Always nutrient-rich lakes |
| Wetlands | Natural filters, buffer zones | Limited protection post-2023 court ruling |
| Algal Blooms | Rapid algae growth, seasonal | Cause taste/odor issues, safe water |
Watershed Management
├─ Legislation & Regulation
│ ├─ Clean Water Act (1972)
│ └─ Sackett v. EPA (2023)
├─ Pollution Sources
│ ├─ Point Source
│ └─ Non-Point Source
├─ Land Use & Management
│ ├─ Forest Preservation
│ ├─ Wetland Buffers
│ └─ Floodplain Expansion
├─ Water Quality Issues
│ ├─ Eutrophication
│ ├─ Algal Blooms
│ └─ Streambank Erosion
└─ Monitoring & Collaboration
├─ Hotspot Identification
└─ Cross-County Efforts
End of Revision Sheet
Test your knowledge on Watershed Management and Water Quality with 9 multiple-choice questions with detailed corrections.
1. What was the primary catalyst for the development of environmental regulations in the United States?
2. What is the primary purpose of the Clean Water Act of 1972?
Memorize the key concepts of Watershed Management and Water Quality with 10 interactive flashcards.
Watershed — definition?
Area draining into a common outlet
Clean Water Act (1972) — regulation?
Regulates point-source pollution, not diffuse sources.
Point source — role?
Identifiable pollution source like factories
Mathématiques
Mathématiques
Mathématiques
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