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Nitrate Awareness: A Health
Issue
For years, nitrates have been
effective in lawn and garden fertilizers by providing grass and
shrubs with life-giving nutrients. However, the accumulation of
these fertilizers can eventually leach through the soil to invade
wells.
While this is not surprising with shallow wells, deep wells are
frequently affected, particularly if they were dug subsequent to a
first well. An Iowa State University Special Report(1)
found that old or depleted wells, often just abandoned and not
filled with concrete as most water specialists recommend, become
readily available reservoirs for runoff and excessive groundwater.
As they refill with surface water, they may become concentrated with
potentially toxic lawn care and agricultural chemicals,
contaminating the new well.
In January 1992, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
released the results of a sophisticated national survey(2)
of nitrates and pesticides in drinking water wells. The National
Pesticide Survey (NPS) tested water from 1,349 community and
domestic rural wells. Samples were taken in every state. Nitrate
detection was projected in 57 percent of the rural domestic wells (RDWs),
and 52.1 percent of the community water system (CWS) wells in the
United States. Approximately 22,500 infants younger than one year
old consuming water from RDWs were projected to be exposed to
nitrate-nitrogen exceeding the 10 milligram per liter safe drinking
water limit. The CWS population is projected to be 43,500 infants.
Nitrates which are ingested by infants or young farm animals
changed into dangerous nitrates, which can seriously affect the
blood's ability to release oxygen. Once these nitrites enter the
circulatory system, they combine with the blood's hemoglobin and
prevent life-sustaining oxygen from being carried to body tissues.
Nitrates and Hemoglobin
Hemoglobin is the part of the red blood cell which distributes
oxygen to the body's cells. Under normal conditions, the hemoglobin
is an efficient transporting mechanism, easily releasing oxygen to
the cells. However, infants less than three months of age have
nitrate reducing bacteria in their digestive systems. These bacteria
convert nitrates to nitrites, which bind strongly with blood
hemoglobin and prevent sufficient oxygen transport in the baby.
Shortness of breath, susceptibility to illness, heart attack, or
even death by asphyxiation can result. By age six months,
hydrochloric acid concentrations in the stomach rise, killing the
the nitrate reducing bacteria. Nitrates are therefore not a concern
in older children and adults.
When In Doubt, Test It Out!
The presence of nitrates and nitrites can be confirmed through
testing by the County Health Department or by a state- or
EPA-certified laboratory. Once detected, point-of-use (POU) water
treatment equipment is generally required to lower these levels
acceptably.
For acceptable levels of nitrite in drinking and cooking water,
the
reverse osmosis and
distillation processes are widely used. Another method of
treating nitrate contamination in specific circumstances is with a
system much like a water softener, but which contains a strong base
anion exchange resin instead of a cation resin. The system is
regenerated in much the same way as a water softener. For best
operating results, soft water (or cation-softened feed water) should
be used, to avoid possible precipitation of low-solubility calcium
or magnesium salts. The latter process provides whole-house
treatment.
Those users on the more than 15 million private wells in the
country are solely responsible for their water's safety, and widely
use POU treatment to solve problems. Where there is a municipal
system, some communities have tried to control high nitrate levels
in their central water system by using a "split stream" arrangement.
In this system, a portion of the water is drawn off and treated
using an anionic nitrate removal process. The treated water is then
blended with the untreated water to dilute the nitrate
concentrations. While this method is effective in lowering nitrate
levels, a point-of-use system may still be preferred by consumers
who want to control harmful nitrate levels in their home water
system.
If you suspect a problem, have your water tested at once. It's a
simple step towards protecting your family's health.
References:
1. "The Nitrate Problem. Special Report No. 34." Iowa State
University of Science and Technology, Cooperative Extension Service
in Agriculture and Home Economics; Ames, Iowa, August 1963.
2. "National Pesticide Survey - Phase II" Office of Pesticides and
Toxic Substances, USEPA, Washington , D.C., 1992.
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