It's a shame that learning is so often tied to negative emotions and stress. This education system needs a complete overhaul. Learning should be giving us Dopamine. Instead, Facebook is usually that source. What a mess.
@@manictiger try to explain this to the authorities of the education system and they'll call the students lazy and incompetent. Millions of students all across the world, and they are all at wrong, while the authority holding geezers who are long past their expiry date are right about everything. That is their logic. It is always the students who are at fault. Tragic.
@@aniketdatta2450 To be fair, making learning interesting is not easy. This guy has a lot of talent and puts in a lot of work. There is just not enough people willing and able to do that in a country so that every child would have only great teachers. Sadly in my country teching attracts a lot of people who dont know what to do with their lives, so they become a teacher because at least their job is safe.
I always found it funny how people rake away leaves and grass clippings and then put down fertilizer. It’s like not drinking water and then hooking yourself up to a saline drip.
Does Eutrophication tend to happen naturally in nature (perhaps a forest fire?) or is it almost always a human condition? Yet another great video btw. I don't tend to gain a lot of new information from youtubers, but your concise videos always seem to carry information peripheral to my world knowledge. Keep it up!! :)
Yes things like forest fires, land slides, and many other natural processes can cause eutrophication. Every autumn in temperate climate trees shed their leaves and can cause degrees of eutrophication. These aren’t really seen as damaging though, as ecosystems have typically adapted to these. Really only human caused eutrophication causes widescale damages. Thanks for watching!
"Fixed" Nitrogen is not N2 molecules, it's Ammonia or Nitrate. Phosphorus used by plants is in the form of Phosphate. Plants use Oxidized forms, not the ELemental form!
I’m learning more about this because of a town park near a river I use to go in the summer with my community and my friends and cousin one time jumped in the river back then when it was clean. It was my favorite park to visit in the summer especially during golden hours. I returned to visit the same park and its was full algae and thats when I googled about eutrophication and made a huge ass post about it on instagram. And then I return to the park with kids now 2 days ago and I saw the river is now cleaner and majority of the eutrophication has been removed. Kinda gave me the same hope I can still enjoy the park and river scenery knowing eutrophication can be removed.
Can ducks be used to prevent Eutrophication. In my country a eco-scientist has developed an eco-friendly waste management model according to which we use ducks to clean lakes and ponds. He says that the ducks paddle so fast, they help in keeping the water clean.
This video is awesome explaining the whole thing in a nutshell. I have one question.....when all the dissolved oxygen gets used up what happens to the bacteria...what follows next in the process?
Hii, can I get your permission to use some of the clips from this video for my video assignment? My video assignment is focusing on converting water pollutant to fertilizer and your video is very helpful with the explanation. Of course, I'll credit with your channel.
So, which bit actually IS eutrophication? The leaching of fertilizer into the soil? The growth of algal blooms?... I'm guessing it's the de-oxygenation of the water, but you didn't explicitly say, so I could be wrong... By the way, I love your channel man, that's why I decided to go back and watch all of your videos from the beginning 🙂
Here in Mexico City, Chapultepec lake is always green so I guess there is no animal or vegetal life :'v, also because of the boats sailing all over. Anyhow congrats for the 1000 subscribers, your channel deserves a LOT more :)
Yes bodies of water close to cities usually don’t do too well, the image I used to show eutrophication in the ocean was actually right outside New York City, another huge population center
A huge source of runoff that you didn't mention is grass clippings. When people dump unbagged grass clippings on the side of the road, they wash into the sewers and decompose, leaching all of the nutrients used to grow them. renegadegardener.com/care/every-curb-is-a-shoreline/
Will you be buying meat or vegetables from countries that clear-cut forests to create farms? Will you buy products made with palm oil? It's not about you clear-cutting, it's about people buying products that are produced with clear-cutting.
The decreased oxygen levels in a body of water occurring due to plant/animal die off and decomposition. After the process, the body of water can be called 'eutrophied'.
So, do anything other than algae, bacteria and invasive species benefit from Eutrophication? This was a pretty negative presentation, and maybe Eutrophication is very destructive of live. Just wondering, as I know little about this phenomenon.
Does anyone know what kind of biomass we're talking about with HAB (harmful algal blooms)? I want to know how much CO2 is being pulled out of the atmosphere, but I can't seem to find it anywhere.
Farmer’s actually have their fields tested throughout the entire field before applying, and only fertilize in the deficient areas. Fertilizers are expensive, especially when you are talking about hundred of acres. So as a farmer, no better be safe than sorry is not true - I don’t want to waste my money.
@@dacadz Do you farm? Do you know the costs? Fertilizers are extremely expensive when talking hundreds of acres. You actually save money by having the fields tested and only treating the deficient areas vs just fertilizing everything! What a waste that would be! Otherwise you are buying unneeded fertilizer and over-fertilizing - which the cost outweighs by again, by having the field tested! If they can't afford the testing, they cant afford the fertilizer. I am not denying there is going to be some run-off, but we do our part to limit it! Just trying to help educate about our livelihood. The urban world really comes after farmers but has no idea what it takes! Give the farmers a break - your belly is full isn't it?
Seriously, where was this channel and all its concise explanations when I was failing my environmental science course last year?
My bad :(
It's a shame that learning is so often tied to negative emotions and stress.
This education system needs a complete overhaul.
Learning should be giving us Dopamine. Instead, Facebook is usually that source.
What a mess.
@@manictiger try to explain this to the authorities of the education system and they'll call the students lazy and incompetent. Millions of students all across the world, and they are all at wrong, while the authority holding geezers who are long past their expiry date are right about everything. That is their logic. It is always the students who are at fault. Tragic.
@@aniketdatta2450 To be fair, making learning interesting is not easy. This guy has a lot of talent and puts in a lot of work. There is just not enough people willing and able to do that in a country so that every child would have only great teachers. Sadly in my country teching attracts a lot of people who dont know what to do with their lives, so they become a teacher because at least their job is safe.
Ya, it's right
Amazing job condensing information into such a short and enjoiable video. You truly inspire me to do better .
Thank you! Still mulling over a collab, just been busy :)
3:23 The cow on the right is like "Do you mind not filming? I can't eat with people watching..."
so true xD
Dexter André Osiander umm... a little late
She did look confused.
I always found it funny how people rake away leaves and grass clippings and then put down fertilizer.
It’s like not drinking water and then hooking yourself up to a saline drip.
Does Eutrophication tend to happen naturally in nature (perhaps a forest fire?) or is it almost always a human condition?
Yet another great video btw. I don't tend to gain a lot of new information from youtubers, but your concise videos always seem to carry information peripheral to my world knowledge. Keep it up!! :)
Yes things like forest fires, land slides, and many other natural processes can cause eutrophication. Every autumn in temperate climate trees shed their leaves and can cause degrees of eutrophication. These aren’t really seen as damaging though, as ecosystems have typically adapted to these. Really only human caused eutrophication causes widescale damages. Thanks for watching!
@@AtlasPro1 Right. Nature does it the correct way. Man....well, we see how that works....and fails....then there's Monsanto.......
@@JaneDoe-nd2et underrated comment
Some surface amazon waters are naturally eutrophic
There are two sorts of eutrophication-
(1) natural
(2) cultural
"Fixed" Nitrogen is not N2 molecules, it's Ammonia or Nitrate. Phosphorus used by plants is in the form of Phosphate. Plants use Oxidized forms, not the ELemental form!
I was going to write that! Thank you (still waiting for an answer from Atlas Pro).
Wow, this is really good! It has all the important information and it's condensed so well.
This is far more interesting than the way it is written in my book
Thank you for this very enlightening video!! This helped me understand and enabled me to answer my assignment in systematics.
Your graphics are improving by leaps and bounds! I love the floating molecules on the river .
Thank you, it’s been one of the biggest challenges so far figuring out how to display concepts visually, glad they work!
I loved the explanation!!! I was wondering if the detritus layer of eutrophicated lakes are a good source for fertilizers??
I cant believe I haven't seen this channel before, the videos are great in quality
Great video as always. Congrats on 1K subs by the way!
Thanks for the support :)
Love you
lmao it’s not like my assignment is three days past due and im rushing to finish it.
literally me rn
Great, keep going man!
Thank you!
Thx for this video, now i do not need help from my parents to study, tysm for this video, i learned lots from here :)
I’m learning more about this because of a town park near a river I use to go in the summer with my community and my friends and cousin one time jumped in the river back then when it was clean. It was my favorite park to visit in the summer especially during golden hours. I returned to visit the same park and its was full algae and thats when I googled about eutrophication and made a huge ass post about it on instagram. And then I return to the park with kids now 2 days ago and I saw the river is now cleaner and majority of the eutrophication has been removed. Kinda gave me the same hope I can still enjoy the park and river scenery knowing eutrophication can be removed.
This also explains southwest Florida’s red tide issue, doesn’t it? I finally understand 🙂
overall very good video everyone needs more of this
Extremely helpful. Thank you.
What a video? whoever thinks that I will quit youtube, they need to think again, this is so good
Wow my school was said not to use zoom for video calling, so my biology teacher just sent me this video from your channel
Excellent work, thank you for enlighting us
Can ducks be used to prevent Eutrophication. In my country a eco-scientist has developed an eco-friendly waste management model according to which we use ducks to clean lakes and ponds. He says that the ducks paddle so fast, they help in keeping the water clean.
Yes, due to their oxygenating effects, they aerate the water.
This video would have been helpful with my uni paper, but I guess its nice to watch your videos and actually know beforehand
Perfect explanation! Wasn't even what I was looking up.
3:23. The cow on the right is like “ Could you mind not filming me, I can’t eat when people are watching me.......”
I need you to get more views already, so i showed you to a few of my feiends. Btw great vid
Thanks for the support, glad to have people like you here :)
I was planning to clear a forest today, but now I think I’ll just watch videos on RUclips.
3:25 wow .are those cows chained or is it like a guide for their head ?
Thank you this saved me from detention from my science teacher
This video is awesome explaining the whole thing in a nutshell.
I have one question.....when all the dissolved oxygen gets used up what happens to the bacteria...what follows next in the process?
Thank you for your graphic explanation! Very helpful. I got it well enough just this moment, i was struggling with it earlier. 💕💕
Hii, can I get your permission to use some of the clips from this video for my video assignment? My video assignment is focusing on converting water pollutant to fertilizer and your video is very helpful with the explanation. Of course, I'll credit with your channel.
Hello people from Miss Amer's class: the answers are as follows: nitrate, fertaliser, food, anime
And this doesn’t even take Round-Up or other harmful chemicals into account. But that’s enough of a topic for a video in itself.
great explanation!
well explained, thank you. Now I can get back to my assessment...
Superb Explanation!
Man! U simply nailed it
Wow. such a video. Really awesome!
OMG this channel is simply superb ❤️
what about the reduction of fe3+ to fe2+ under anaerobic conditions and the phosphor trap that therefore exists or doesn’t exist? missed that part
do you have any sources (studies, papers, etc) for the info in this video? working on a project for uni and would like to read the literature
So, which bit actually IS eutrophication? The leaching of fertilizer into the soil? The growth of algal blooms?... I'm guessing it's the de-oxygenation of the water, but you didn't explicitly say, so I could be wrong... By the way, I love your channel man, that's why I decided to go back and watch all of your videos from the beginning 🙂
3:23 The cow at the bottom right corner be like: *_Why am I still here?_*
great explanation! Good job!
The explanation is so good 🙃, it was much needed
I was struggling to remember this word yesterday. Seen a lot of them.
But if I am fertilization (as a human being lying down for a loooooong time) then suiciding at a lake is not a responsible thing to do?
I would not think twice about fertiliser - Oscar 2020
Here in Mexico City, Chapultepec lake is always green so I guess there is no animal or vegetal life :'v, also because of the boats sailing all over. Anyhow congrats for the 1000 subscribers, your channel deserves a LOT more :)
Yes bodies of water close to cities usually don’t do too well, the image I used to show eutrophication in the ocean was actually right outside New York City, another huge population center
Informative 👍
sources?
Now I can write a book over it
Thank you Sir for this short and understandable video 🙏
A huge source of runoff that you didn't mention is grass clippings. When people dump unbagged grass clippings on the side of the road, they wash into the sewers and decompose, leaching all of the nutrients used to grow them. renegadegardener.com/care/every-curb-is-a-shoreline/
ok i guess i have understood more thanks an d guess mainly take place in water bodies
Well I guess I won't be clearing a forest this Saturday
Will you be buying meat or vegetables from countries that clear-cut forests to create farms? Will you buy products made with palm oil? It's not about you clear-cutting, it's about people buying products that are produced with clear-cutting.
@@pendlera2959 I will be doing all of that
Wait, so, as someone who has never heard the word before, exactly which part/collection of the processes discussed is eutrophication?
The decreased oxygen levels in a body of water occurring due to plant/animal die off and decomposition. After the process, the body of water can be called 'eutrophied'.
@@k0mm4nd3r_k3n Thanks!
What is the effect of eutrophication caused by water pollution?
Kills the fish, plant life, causes cancer to humans, toxic if pets drink it, removes oxygen from the water…
this video should not have any dislikes
Nicely explained
So, do anything other than algae, bacteria and invasive species benefit from Eutrophication? This was a pretty negative presentation, and maybe Eutrophication is very destructive of live. Just wondering, as I know little about this phenomenon.
I am seeing this for the good concept of ᴇᴜᴛʀᴏᴘʜɪᴄᴀᴛɪᴏɴ. I have assessment on 2nd November 😰so this is really helping me....😊😊😊
Pls Stan tws they are too underrated
so this is what happened to the salton sea ouch
Thank you so much sir🙏
Thank you bro! very good explanation
Thank youu , awesome ❤❤
Hi what do you call an organic nutrients thrown in the water?
Anything that’s isn’t made of chemicals like dead trees, grass clippings, leaves
Plz describe the difference bet eutrophication and ecological succession
can I have the script? I need it for my Biology class
Great video thank you for that.
explained right,matched with the textbook, extra marks for correct picutres not their in the book
Thanks for the video. it was really helpful.
Does anyone know what kind of biomass we're talking about with HAB (harmful algal blooms)? I want to know how much CO2 is being pulled out of the atmosphere, but I can't seem to find it anywhere.
Great video! we learned alot (just not spelling)
But what is eutrophication?
The fertilizer bag you show has no phosphorus in it... the 24 is the nitrogen the 0 is the phosphorus and the 11 is the potash.
great explaination,,,love u from india
Will still use fertilizer though since there is no body of water near our place except the one near a massive river, I'm guilt free.
Thank you so much
Farmer’s actually have their fields tested throughout the entire field before applying, and only fertilize in the deficient areas. Fertilizers are expensive, especially when you are talking about hundred of acres. So as a farmer, no better be safe than sorry is not true - I don’t want to waste my money.
@@dacadz Do you farm? Do you know the costs? Fertilizers are extremely expensive when talking hundreds of acres. You actually save money by having the fields tested and only treating the deficient areas vs just fertilizing everything! What a waste that would be! Otherwise you are buying unneeded fertilizer and over-fertilizing - which the cost outweighs by again, by having the field tested! If they can't afford the testing, they cant afford the fertilizer. I am not denying there is going to be some run-off, but we do our part to limit it! Just trying to help educate about our livelihood. The urban world really comes after farmers but has no idea what it takes! Give the farmers a break - your belly is full isn't it?
You can also use oilseed radishes as a organic fertilizer
Thanks,this video helped me a lot😊😊😊😊😊
Thank you soo very much Sir ,its really knowledgeable
Can we use algae to feed land plants and soil?
Why?
Or
Why not?
Really it's good video
And if your pet’s drink from that water they are dead, it’s toxic
Nah got me watching bout 20 vids for this
Every lake and impoundment is unqique. Many factors. Oversimplification here, but it works.
Me dumping fertilizer straight into a lake: Y'all hear something?
nicely explained
thanks for this vid sir i was confused
Congo for 1m
Will you please do this kind of videos moreeee😍😍
thank you, this helped me with me homework
Then this tells us that nobody has control on nature
here before my science test
Effective