What You Need to Know
The best protection against contaminants harming your family’s water supply is having an annual checkup of your water well system. Additional tests are suggested in special circumstances – floods, heavy rainfalls, known chemical spills – to ensure that you always have safe drinking water.
Contamination from nitrates is one of the problems that can arise after severe flooding or heavy rains in rural areas.
What are nitrates?
Nitrates are nitrogen-oxygen chemical units that combine with various organic and inorganic compounds. They are essential nutrients for plants, which absorb them from soil. The excess nitrates not used by the plants are carried through the soil to ground water in a process called “leaching.” Once in water, they remain there until used by plants or another organism, or removed by water treatment techniques.
What are sources of nitrates?
The greatest source of nitrates is fertilizers that are used to provide nitrates to crops. Animal and human waste also contains nitrogen in the form of ammonia. Decomposing plant and animal materials also generate nitrates.
Why should I be concerned about nitrates?
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has a maximum contaminant level for nitrates at 10 parts per million. High levels of nitrates can cause health problems, including methemoglobinemia, commonly known as “blue baby syndrome.”
In blue baby syndrome, nitrates are reduced to nitrites in an infant’s stomach. When the nitrites enter the bloodstream, they interfere with the blood’s ability to carry oxygen to body tissues. This can be an acute condition in which the baby’s health deteriorates rapidly in a span of a few days. It can cause shortness of breath, increased susceptibility to illness, heart attacks, and even death by asphyxiation.
Older children and adults are able to withstand higher levels of nitrates than babies because of stronger stomach acids that kill the bacteria. However, there have been reports that nitrates could potentially be linked to gastrointestinal cancer. The EPA also says that long-term exposure to water over the maximum contaminant level can cause diuresis (excessive discharge of urine), increased starchy deposits, and hemorrhaging of the spleen.
How can nitrates reach my private water supply?
Nitrates are very soluble, and do not bind with soil so the potential is high for them to migrate to ground water. This is especially true if your water well system is near agricultural land or animal feed lots. Incidents such as heavy rains, flooding, chemical spills, or failed sewage systems can cause nitrates to enter soil near your private water well, too.
http://wellowner.org/water-quality/nitrates/