Study: Nitrogen pollution worsens in Rockies lakes
By JUDITH KOHLER
DENVER (AP) - Airborne nitrogen pollution from vehicle exhaust
and farm fertilizer is turning algae in the alpine lakes of Rocky
Mountain National Park into junk food for fish, a study says.
A similar phenomenon is occurring in Sweden and Norway,
according to the study of about 90 high-elevation lakes set to be
published in the journal Science on Friday.
Arizona State University professor James Elser, the study's lead
author, said the effect of airborne nitrogen on once-pristine lakes
is greater than previously believed. The nitrogen's sources include
vehicle exhaust, fertilizer used on farms and livestock feed lots
and power plant emissions.
More nitrogen can reduce long-term lake biodiversity because
algae become poor food for other microscopic organisms and,
ultimately, fish. The algae are high in nitrogen, but low in
phosphorous and less nutritious.
Previous studies have documented rising nitrogen levels in Rocky
Mountain National Park, 70 miles northwest of Denver.
Elser likened the algae to junk food. ``It's like eating
marshmallows all day and expecting to grow. You can't do it,'' he
said Thursday.
The fish in the park include the rare greenback cutthroat trout
and other trout species.
The next step is to study how changes in algae populations are
affecting the rest of the ecosystem, Elser said.
``This is filling in some of what we didn't know before,'' said
Jill Baron, a scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey and adjunct
professor at the Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory at Colorado
State University in Fort Collins.
Baron has studied air pollution levels in Rocky Mountain
National Park since 1981. Her research prompted Vaughn Baker, the
park's superintendent, to push for efforts to cut the pollution.
Along with changes to the algae, park biologists blame nitrogen
for an increase in sedges, compared to other grasses and flowering
plants known as forbs.
``One of the main reasons this park was established was for the
protection of tundra and alpine areas,'' park biologist Jim
Cheatham said.
Rocky Mountain National Park has 60 peaks higher than 12,000
feet. It is home to elk, deer, moose, bighorn sheep, mountain
lions, bears and eagles.
This year, the National Park Service reported increases in
nitrogen-rich ammonium that could change ecosystems in 16 parks
across the country.
A 2007 plan signed by state and federal officials and Rocky
Mountain National Park aims to reduce airborne nitrogen levels over
25 years. Researchers said then that nitrogen levels were 20 times
more than normal.
``We're admitting that we could never reach the natural levels''
because of development elsewhere, Cheatham said.
The plan aims to cut nitrogen levels in half, said Mike
Silverstein, manager of planning and policy for the Colorado air
pollution control division. The nitrogen comes from nitrogen oxide,
whose sources include vehicle and power plant emissions, and
ammonium, whose sources include livestock feed lots, farms and
water treatment plants.
Studies show the pollution is coming from the Denver area and
northeast Colorado, one of the country's largest agricultural
areas, as well as other states, Silverstein said.
Officials hope to cut nitrogen to 1.5 kilograms per hectare, or
2.47 acres. The current average is 3.1 kilograms.
Silverstein said state and federal efforts have reduced
pollution from power plants and vehicles and plans are in the works
to cut emissions by another 100,000 tons of nitrogen oxide per year
in Colorado over the next 10 to 15 years.
Ammonium isn't regulated, Silverstein said. But state officials,
Colorado State researchers and the agriculture industry are
exploring ways to change farming practices to cut emissions.
On the Net:
Science: http://www.sciencemag.org
Rocky Mountain National Park Nitrogen Deposition Reduction
Plan: http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/ap/rmnp/NDRPAugust07.pdf
Rocky Mountain Park: http://www.nps.gov/romo/index.htm
11/05/09 17:03
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