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| Diagram 1: An eutrophication lake | 
Eutrophication is a natural process that occurs in an aging lake or pond as that body of water gradually builds up its concentration of plant nutrients. Cultural or artificial eutrophication occurs when human activity introduces increased amounts of these nutrients.
   Human activities almost always result in the creation of waste, and many       of these waste products often contain nitrates and phosphates. Nitrates       are a compound of nitrogen, and most are produced by bacteria. Phosphates       are phosphorous compounds. Both nitrates and phosphates are absorbed by       plants and are needed for growth. However, the human use of detergents and       chemical fertilizers has greatly increased the amount of nitrates and       phosphates that are washed into our lakes and ponds. When this occurs in a       sufficient quantity, they act like fertilizer for plants and algae and       speed up their rate of growth. 
  Algae are a group of plantlike organisms that live in water and can make       their own food through photosynthesis (using sunlight to make food from       simple chemicals). When additional phosphates are added to a body of       water, the plants begin to grow explosively and algae takes off or       "blooms." In the process, the plants and algae consume       greater amounts of oxygen in the water, robbing fish and other species of       necessary oxygen.
         All algae eventually die, and when they do, oxygen is required by bacteria       in order for them to decompose or break down the dead algae. A cycle then       begins in which more bacteria decompose more dead algae, consuming even more oxygen in the process. The bacteria then release more       phosphates back into the water, which feed more algae. As levels of oxygen       in the body of water become lower, species such as fish and mollusks       literally suffocate to death.
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| Diagram 2: Process of eutrophication lake formation | 
         Eventually, the lake or pond begins to fill in and starts to be choked       with plant growth. As the plants die and turn to sediment that sinks, the       lake bottom starts to rise. The waters grow shallower and finally the body       of water is filled completely and disappears. This also can happen to       wetlands, which are already shallow. Eventually, there are shrubs growing       where a body of water used to be.
         In the 1960s and 1970s, Lake Erie was the most publicized example of       eutrophication. Called a "dead lake," the smallest and       shallowest of the five Great Lakes was swamped for decades with nutrients       from heavily developed agricultural and urban lands. As a result, plant       and algae growth choked out most other species living in the lake, and       left the beaches unusable due to the smell of decaying algae that washed       up on the shores. New pollution controls for sewage treatment plants and       agricultural methods by the United States and Canada led to drastic       reductions in the amount of nutrients entering the lake.                                                                                    
 
Ohh how sad. D:
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