User:Garner Kohrell/Agricultural pollution
Fertilizers[edit]
[edit]Fertilizers are used to provide crops with additional sources of nutrients, such as Nitrogen, Phosphorus,and Potassium, that promote plant growth and increase crop yields. Nitrogen fertilizers supply plants with forms of nitrogen that are biologically available for plant uptake; namely NO3- (nitrate) and NH4+ (ammonium). Only a fraction of this is taken up by crops, and the remainder accumulates in the soil or is lost as runoff. Nitrate fertilizers are much more likely to be lost to the soil profile through runoff because of the like charges between the molecule and negatively charged clay particles. High application rates of nitrogen-containing fertilizers combined with the high water-solubility of nitrate leads to increased runoff into surface water as well as leaching into groundwater, thereby causing groundwater pollution. The excessive use of nitrogen-containing fertilizers (be they synthetic or natural) is particularly damaging, as much of the nitrogen that is not taken up by plants is transformed into nitrate which is easily leached. Nitrate levels above 10 mg/L (10 ppm) in groundwater can cause "blue baby syndrome" (acquired methemoglobinemia). The nutrients, especially nitrates, in fertilizers can cause problems for natural habitats and for human health if they are washed off soil into watercourses or leached through soil into groundwater.[citation needed] Moreover, the abuse of fertilizers can cause air pollution in the form of ammonia.
*Bold font indicates Garner's changes to article section.