Hey:)
Bottled water is definitely not a long-term plan.
Reducing the water consumption does not really solve the problem.
Store the rain water is a nice choice, but you cannot drink the rain water directly, it needs to be filtered.
Since the contamination is only caused by N and P, it should be easy to filter out, but still, it depends on the type of the compound of N and P.
I would choose the last option.
“In diffusion, particles move from an area of higher concentration to one of lower concentration until equilibrium is reached. In osmosis, a semipermeable membrane is present, so only the solvent molecules are free to move to equalize concentration.”
Cr: Google
Fertile soil is valuable because there is a limited supply. Less than one eighth of land on Earth has soil that are well suited for farming.
The thick, fertile soil of the prairies took many thousands of years to develop.
The two ways that the value of soil can be reduced is help use soil correctly, peanuts were once a corp to help soil, and still can be. The soil value recycle rocks and bedrock.
The value of soil is reduced when it loses its fertility and when topsoil is lost due to erosion. Soil can be conserved through contour plowing, conservation plowing and crop rotation. The thick mass of tough roots at the surface of the soil.

Vacuoles store water, food, and waste. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a series of tunnels throughout the cytoplasm. They transport proteins from one part of the cell to another. Ribosomes are the protein factories of the cell.
<h3>Hope it helps uh...</h3>
Answer:
Due to absorption of more water.
Explanation:
A Cotton shirt takes more time to dry as compared to a synthetic shirt due to absorption of more water by the cotton fiber as compare to other fiber. Cotton absorbs much more water than other synthetic fibers, and attached to the molecules of cotton for longer period of time which means cotton fibers take more time to dry as compared to synthetic fiber which absorb little amount of water and loosely attached to the molecules of fiber.