Dissolved oxygen. Pre Assess. Post Assess. Big Ideas. Learning Target 1

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1 Dissolved oxygen MS LS2 I can construct an argument with empirical evidence to show that changes to physical or biological components of an ecosystem can affect populations. Learning Target 1 Pre Assess Big Ideas Post Assess I can define dissolved oxygen and can explain a variety of circumstances that cause D.O. levels to change. 1

2 How Does Water Temperature Affect Dissolved Oxygen? Ice Water Room Temp. Hot Group 1st 2nd 4th 5th Conclusion? Based on the data how does water temp. affect dissolved oxygen? 2

3 Dissolved oxygen Information from "Water's The Matter" module How Does Dissolved Oxygen Affect Freshwater Ecosystems? 3

4 Dissolved Oxygen in Freshwater Ecosytems. I can define dissolved oxygen and can explain a variety of circumstances that cause D.O. levels to change. Organisms must have a minimum level of dissolved oxygen. The level varies for organisms, but in general a level of 4 mg/l is required. An increase in water temperature can stress or kill aquatic organisms, but there is not an upper limit or maximum amount for dissolved oxygen. In other words, there is no such thing as "too much" dissolved oxygen. 0 2 mg/l: not enough oxygen to support life. 2 4 mg/l: only a few fish and aquatic insects can survive. 4 7 mg/l: good for many aquatic animals, low for cold water fish 7 11 mg/l: very good for most stream fish 4

5 How does oxygen get in the water? I can define dissolved oxygen and can explain a variety of circumstances that cause D.O. levels to change. Basically, oxygen gets into water by three different ways. Diffusion from surrounding air. The air in the atmosphere has a higher concentration of oxygen than water so oxygen diffuses or is "pushed" from the air into the water. Aeration of water. Churning waters causes air to hit the water at a high pressure, allowing more oxygen to become dissolved (rapids and waterfalls). Waste products of plants. Plants use carbon dioxide to make food and generate oxygen as a waste product. This oxygen is immediately dissolved into the water. 5

6 Give One/Get One Restate the questions in your journal. Skip four lines between questions. Then answer them. 1. What is the minimum level of dissolved oxygen needed in freshwater? 2. What are three ways that oxygen can become dissolved in water? Find someone from a different table to share an answer with. If you weren't able to answer the question completely fill in the answers as you "give and get" with your classmates. 6

7 Aquatic Plants I can define dissolved oxygen and can explain a variety of circumstances that cause D.O. levels to change. Although plants produce oxygen during the day as they produce their own food, the situation is reversed at night. aquatic vegetation In darkness, plants will consume oxygen as fuel (cellular respiration). Thus, a body of water with a high plant density will have high dissolved oxygen levels during the day and low levels of dissolved oxygen at night. 7

8 Instruction What is being communicated through the graph? With a partner, take t talking through the I2 strategy to explain the graph. 8

9 Sep 22 10:37 PM 9

10 Instruction Content/writing space 10

11 Dissolved oxygen I can define dissolved oxygen and can explain a variety of circumstances that cause D.O. levels to change. Etch a Sketch Notes What factors affect the amount of dissolved oxygen? Temperature. The amount of DO is highly dependent on the water temperature. As temperature increases dissolved oxygen decreases. (This is called an inverse relationship). Altitude. As altitude increases, the atmospheric (barometric) pressure decreases. Since there is less air pressing on the surface of the water then the amount of oxygen diffused (pushed) into the water decreases. Organic material. Organic material comes from parts of trees and plants that fall into a body of water. Organic material also includes decaying algae, dead aquatic plants, dead fish or other organisms, and human and animal wastes. Organic material does not directly remove the DO, but it creates conditions where large amounts of bacteria accumulate. These bacteria consume large amounts of DO, driving the overall oxygen level down. 11

12 Dissolved oxygen I can define dissolved oxygen and can explain a variety of circumstances that cause D.O. levels to change. What factors affect the amount of dissolved oxygen? Nitrates and Phosphates. Nitrates and phosphates are the main component in fertilizer. Fertilizers are used to promote plant growth. When these chemicals are in high concentrations in water, they do the same thing. They fertilize. This causes algae and aquatic plants to thrive. As a result, two things happen: 1. A rate of plant growth occurs that cannot be sustained. Plants grow so dense that eventually they choke each other off. Large amounts of plant material accumulates, creating organic matter and large amounts of oxygen demanding bacteria. 2. Algae grow and create an unstable DO level. A large algae population will create oxygen during the day (photosynthesis), but only consumes it during the night (no light for photosynthesis). This results in a very low DO level just before sunrise, creating stressful conditions for some aquatic organisms. 12

13 Dissolved oxygen I can define dissolved oxygen and can explain a variety of circumstances that cause D.O. levels to change. How does human intervention affect the amount of dissolved oxygen that is present in water? Dams Dams slow the flow of water, reducing the amount of aeration and increasing the temperature. Human Waste Besides creating a health hazard, human waste carries with it a large amount of oxygen consuming bacteria. Sometimes this is a problem during floods when sewage treatment plants overflow and are not able to treat all the water. Raw sewage can spill into the waterway and introduce bacteria into the water that will use up a large amount of the available dissolved oxygen. Fertilizers Poor farming practices result in large amounts of fertilizer being washed into rivers and lakes. This creates algae blooms and large growths of other plants, which ultimately result in too much organic matter and oxygen consuming bacteria. Farms and golf courses are places where fertilizer use is high. 13

14 Instruction Content/writing space 14

15 1.Record your measurement on the board. 2.Empty fixed sample down drain. 3.Put any solution from the titrator back into the Sodium Thiosulfate bottle. 4.Recap bottles, reassemble kit and clean area. Sep 19 10:27 PM 15