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River sediment study explores the impacts of nitrates and pharmaceuticals in our waterways

Abigail Moody
/
Boise State Public Radio

There are wastewater treatment plants in every major city designed to filter out some of the chemicals and drugs that end up going down our drains.

But there’s another way this kind of treatment takes place, and it’s all natural: rivers like the one that flows through Boise have microorganisms and bacteria that break down contaminants by eating them.

That’s great for the rivers, but after the bacteria "digest" nasty chemicals like nitrates, it can sometimes "breathe out" even worse stuff like greenhouse gases.

Kevin Roche is the director of the Hydrologic Interfaces and Processes Laboratory in the Department of Civil Engineering at Boise State University, and he’s been studying all of this, and he joined Idaho Matters to tell us more.

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As Senior Producer of our live daily talk show Idaho Matters, I’m able to indulge my love of storytelling and share all kinds of information (I was probably a Town Crier in a past life). My career has allowed me to learn something new everyday and to share that knowledge with all my friends on the radio.