Publisher's Synopsis
Subsurface migration, fertilizer runoff from farms, storm water from streets, and other forms of diffuse pollution are now recognized as having serious environmental consequences. In more than 50 percent of estimated cases in which water quality goals are not achieved, diffuse pollution is cited as the main cause. This guide surveys the myriad problems and challenges presented by this form of pollution, and offers a wide range of feasible, cost–effective solutions for dealing with them. Water Quality: Prevention, Identification, and Management of Diffuse Pollution covers aspects of diffuse pollution ranging from sources and sites to health and legal consequences. It provides readers with valuable discussions of
- Sources of diffuse pollution
- Legal definitions
- The hydrologic nature of diffuse loads, and the processes and land uses contributing to these loads
- Best management practices that emphasize removal of priority pollutants
- Use of wetlands
- The fate of pollutants in receiving waters
- The restoration of reservoirs, streams, lakes, and watersheds that have been damaged