Back to ESS Topics
4.4.21 min read

Eutrophication

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 4

Smart study tools

Turn reading into results

Move beyond passive notes. Answer real exam questions, get AI feedback, and build the skills that earn top marks.

Get Started Free

Eutrophication

Big idea: Eutrophication is when excess nutrients cause algal blooms that eventually suffocate aquatic life. It creates dead zones - areas where almost nothing can survive.

The eutrophication process (learn this sequence!)

  • Nutrient input - nitrates and phosphates enter water (fertilizers, sewage)
  • Algal bloom - excess nutrients cause rapid algae growth
  • Light blocked - algae on surface blocks sunlight to plants below
  • Plant death - submerged plants die without light
  • Decomposition - bacteria decompose dead matter, using oxygen
  • Oxygen depletion - dissolved oxygen falls (hypoxia)
  • Fish kills - animals die or flee the low-oxygen zone
  • Dead zone - area becomes lifeless
PAST PAPER ALERT (Paper 1, 4 marks): Explain how nutrient pollution could impact aquatic food production in the Gulf of Mexico. You MUST link eutrophication to FOOD PRODUCTION (fish deaths, dead zones reducing fisheries). Max 3 marks if you only describe eutrophication without the food link!

Major dead zones

  • Gulf of Mexico - approximately 15,000 km squared, from Mississippi River nutrients
  • Baltic Sea - one of largest, from agricultural runoff
  • Chesapeake Bay - USA, improving with management
  • Lake Erie - recurring blooms from farm runoff

Sources of nutrient pollution

  • Agricultural fertilizers - largest source globally
  • Sewage and wastewater - contains N and P from human waste and detergents
  • Animal waste - concentrated from factory farms
  • Atmospheric deposition - N from vehicle and industrial emissions
  • Urban runoff - fertilizers from lawns and gardens

Don’t just read about Eutrophication — practice it

Apply what you learned with real exam-style questions. AI feedback shows exactly how to improve your answers.