Government study finds pesticides, other contaminants prevalent in West's national parks
By The Associated Press
"Contaminants are everywhere. You can't get more remote than these northern parts of
Also, mercury levels at the eight parks and DDT levels at Glacier and Sequoia and
"We replaced them with pesticides with much shorter lifetimes in the environment," Jaffe said. "But in places like the Central Valley of California, we are applying many, many tons of these every year. ... We now know they can move substantial distances." A parks advocacy group called the federal report "a wake-up call" that should mobilize Congress to take a tougher stance on air pollution. "We can take steps to reduce mercury emissions from power plants, steps to reduce carbon dioxide emissions that cause global warming," said Will Hammerquist with the National Parks Conservation Association.
The $6 million study is known as the Western Airborne Contaminants Assessment Project. It is the most comprehensive to date on the distribution and concentration of contaminants outside developed areas, according to the project's scientific director, Dixon Landers with the Environmental Protection Agency. Contrary to the conventional wisdom that remoteness means less pollution, Landers said many of the parks — particularly those at higher elevations and in colder climates — actually are at higher risk. Mercury from power plants in
Release of the study, which was coordinated by the National Park Service, came after a delay of several months. A Park Service spokeswoman, Colleen Flanagan, said the delay was caused by the time needed to analyze the vast volumes of data collected, from 2002 to 2007. The study also included researchers from the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Forest Service.
To be continue in other article...
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Re-publish by Jacob Paradox from link (www.routers.com),(www.iht.com), (www.routers.com), (www.nytimes.com)
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