We all know about pollution from industrial and municipal sources.
When you turn on a faucet or flush your toilet water flows down pipes,
leaving your home and entering a municipal sewer system. After it is
treated in a wastewater treatment plant it is discharged into the
river. Potentially contaminated water that enters the river from an
identifiable location is what we call a point source,
or end-of-pipe pollution, and it is carefully regulated by the Kansas
Department of Health and Environment and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency. But water can also flow over your lawn and driveway
during a rainstorm, and it runs off agricultural fields and roads—this
water eventually makes its way to the river without being treated.
Water that picks up pollution by flowing over a lawn or field that has
been sprayed with fertilizer or pesticides is called non-point source
pollution. Another common term is “stormwater runoff” which emphasizes
the role of rainfall in washing chemicals off the land and into the
river. The Kansas River watershed is made up of vast tracks of grazing lands, as well as cropland; but in the Lower Kansas Watershed there is a significant amount of land that has been developed for urban and suburban uses. This means that the Kaw is impacted by both agricultural run-off and urban stormwater runoff. Online resources for stormwater management |
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