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Concentration Measurements and Environmental Regulations

Because many toxins begin to have negative environmental effects at very low levels, their abundance in ppm or ug/mL are used to set the limits of pollutants that are legally permitted in stack smoke, discharge water, soil contamination, and so on. For example, coal fired power plants may be limited to a discharge of 0.5 ppm of SO2 in the stack smoke. If a plant’s emissions exceed that amount, it may be in violation of local or federal air quality standards and could be subject to a fine.

Pollution effects on wildlife

Not unreasonably, we tend to be most concerned by the impact of pollution on human health and interests. However, there is growing documentation of the harm pollution is inflicting on wildlife. The following are just a small sample.

Pesticides

The pesticide DDT was banned in the U.S. in 1972 because it caused raptor eggs to thin and break. But residual DDT and other persistent organochlorine pesticides continue to impact wildlife today. Additionally, DDT is still used in many other countries as the most effective control of malaria-bearing mosquitoes.

Prescription Drugs

Prescription drugs, caffeine, and other medications can pass through both the human body and sewage treatment facilities, and are now present in many waterways. Some of these may be toxic to aquatic life. Others, especially steroids, estrogen, testosterone and similar regulatory hormones, are likely to interfere with the development of organisms.

Heavy Metals

When hunters shoot animals with lead shot, but do not recover the dead or injured animals, the shot is eventually ingested by other wildlife. The lead is concentrated as it passes up the food chain, and the top predators, especially raptors, get lead poisoning. Many states now require the use of steel shot.

Mining wastes also release toxic levels of substances like lead and mercury into waterways.

Water Acidification

Acid rain and snow is produced from the burning of high-sulfur coals in electrical power plants. Acid mine run-off is caused by the reaction of rainwater with mine tailings. Acidification can sterilize water bodies, killing off all aquatic flora and fauna. When wildfowl and other wildlife ingest this water, they can be poisoned by heavy metals.

Dioxin

Dioxin is generated by burning wastes and in the production of some papers and plastics. It accumulates in animal fats and concentrates up the food chain, and has been linked to cancers and reproductive issues in a number of species.

Oil Spills

Oil spills have immediate devastating effects – marine mammals and waterfowl coated with oil drown, are poisoned, or die of hypothermia. Balls of oil that sink to the seafloor can smother organisms. Less obvious effects include tumors and reproductive damage in fishes and crustaceans caused by oil byproducts.

Noise Pollution

Chronic noise pollution from low-flying aircraft, snowmobiles, motorcycles, and traffic can cause wildlife to abandon habitats, lose reproductive function, and become more vulnerable to predation due to loss of hearing.

Light Pollution

Light pollution at night disorients bats, insects, and migratory birds.

Eutrophication

Eutrophication results from the addition of enriching agents – detergents, fertilizers, and organic wastes – to water bodies. Explosive growth and subsequent decay of algae use up available oxygen, which in turn suffocates aquatic animals and plants. The change in water chemistry can also drive out native species.

Sedimentation

Sediments eroded during construction or agricultural practices are washed into waterways, damaging fish spawning grounds and smothering bottom dwelling organisms.

Summary

Studies of the effects of pollution on wildlife are of more than academic interest. Like the proverbial canary in the coal mine, disease and damage in the natural world is often a harbinger of similar danger to ourselves.

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Source:  OpenStax, Ap environmental science. OpenStax CNX. Sep 25, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10548/1.2
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