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Backpacker Magazine – Online Exclusive

Phantom Menace: Air Pollution Threatens Western National Parks

Invisible but dangerous, airborne pollutants are a danger to the West's most iconic national parks

by: by Amanda Leigh Mascarelli

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Rocky Mountain National Park (Anthony Cerretani)
Rocky Mountain National Park (Anthony Cerretani)


Strapping gaiters over their bare legs, Baron and her team traverse calf-deep snow patches to reach their field sites. They bushwhack through low-hanging limbs, maneuver over fallen trees and gnarled roots, and slide down the snowpack, occasionally postholing, in pursuit of the experimental plots that Baron and her team set up in 1992. Stopping at one plot, Baron empties a baggie of tiny ammonium nitrate pellets into the soil. These pellets will release nitrogen throughout the flagged area, leaving a Hansel-and-Gretel trail of white pebbles on the forest floor—and allowing researchers to see what effects this excess nutrient will have.

Telltale signs of over-fertilization in the park are already apparent. At lower elevations, weedy, aggressive species, such as several non-native European grasses, now crop up along trail margins, and the park’s historically rich variety of diatoms (doily-shaped algae that form the base of the food chain) have been replaced by just two dominant native species. The differences are subtle—but if trends continue on the current trajectory, the park’s ecosystems could be severely impacted. “These biological changes are portents of more serious things to come,” says William Bowman, an ecologist at the University of Colorado at Boulder. In the worst-case scenario, that could mean acidified soil, heavy metals leaching into park lakes and streams, dead fish, and a profoundly different environment. 

And unfortunately, nitrogen is just the beginning. A National Park Service study released in February 2008 found that a slew of toxic airborne chemicals—including DDT, Dieldren, and mercury—have accumulated in disturbingly high levels in the streams, soils, and plants of America’s most pristine wildernesses. The effects of these contaminants echo up the food chain: Fish at several parks were found to contain levels of pesticides and mercury that exceed safe consumption limits for humans, birds, and other wildlife. “Parks are our last bastions of cleanliness,” says Baron, “so this kind of insidious stuff coming in out of the sky is a terrible thing for an area that is our last, best hope to keep ecosystems in their natural state.”

But it’s not too late. Colorado adopted the Nitrogen Deposition Reduction Plan in 2007, a road map (based largely on Baron’s and Bowman’s work) aimed at bringing the nitrogen influx at Rocky Mountain National Park down to acceptable levels by 2032. Farmers and ranchers are closely involved, working to learn how they can better manage livestock operations and fertilization practices to minimize unwanted nitrogen. And ordinary hikers can do plenty to help. Actions that combat climate change—such as biking to work, driving cleaner-burning vehicles, reducing energy use and buying more efficient products—will also slash airborne pollutants like nitrogen, mercury, and other heavy metals.

As storm clouds gather in the west, Baron hurries to complete her tasks. The glistening lake has now turned steely blue, and a cool breeze sends a shiver through the meadow grasses. Surrounded by granite towers and glaciers, the setting is postcard-perfect—and hard to imagine any other way. If enough people listen to Baron’s alarm, there won’t be a need to.


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READERS COMMENTS

Air Pollution Facts
Nov 19, 2010

When smoke accumulation reared its ugly head in the 19th century, the British Parliament deemed it a good idea to do various studies of their urban pollutant and even passed the Public Health Act of 1875, which concluded the smoke to be a nuisance that needed to be eliminated. Groups of engineers were formed to define the quantity and composition of the pollutants, and to figure out ways of clean-burning, smokeless coal. Smoke-abatement caught on in America as well; we didn’t want to be wasting a natural resource by burning it inefficiently, as evidenced by the accumulation of soot.
http://www.greenliving9.com/air-pollution-facts-air-pollution-levels.html

Chiropractic Marketing
Feb 05, 2010

<a href="http://www.chiropracticmarketingsecret.com">Air is the most important element of human environment. Man can't live a single moments without air. But we don't think that it is we who pollute this most vital element. Clean air is essential for life. Air is polluted in many ways. Smoke pollutes air. Man makes fires to cook his food.To make bricks burns refuse, melts pitch for road construction and burns wood. All these things produce heavy smoke and this smoke pollutes air. Railway engies, power houses, mills and factories use coal and oil. buses, tucks and cars use petrol and diesel oil. Again all these things create smoke and cause air pollution. The most serious air pollution occurs in big industrial areas where there are many mills and factories. serious air pollution also occurs in big cities where there are many buses, trucks and cars plying the street everyday. Sometimes men in big industrial area become so sick by inhaling polluted air that they cannot be cued. So proper measures and steps should be taken to prevent air pollution.</a>

wert
Nov 17, 2009

urs ammayimma

cryingwolflover
Aug 27, 2009

maybe mother nature will adapt over time and develop a way to survive increasing levels of nitrogen like the plants have since levels began increasing in 1950. maybe mother nature will evolve to the ever changing conditions in the atmosphere and create a new wonderful thriving plant species. Chances are mother nature will win in the long run.

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