Guest guest Posted March 27, 2001 Report Share Posted March 27, 2001 http://www.missoulian.com/display/inn_features/feature01.txt Dirty secrets In the snow Some of the data-collection sites are four- or five-day trips on skis for USGS ecologist Dan Fagre and assistants. Here, the crew returns from Granite Park in Glacier National Park with sleds full of snow samples. Photos courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey By MICHAEL JAMISON of the Missoulian GLACIER NATIONAL PARK - Ingersoll slipped one ski in front of the other, again and again and again, sliding across snow, across bits of Montana, pieces of Washington, tiny molecular fragments of China and India. To get to the top of Glacier National Park's Apgar Mountain, Ingersoll skied mile after mile across the invisible litter of the world. A scientist studying snow chemistry, Ingersoll is working on the old adage that what goes up must, in fact, come down. And so he goes up to see what's come down. What goes up into the regional atmosphere in the form of sulfates, nitrates and ammoniums, for instance, must come down in winter snows. And what lands up on Apgar Mountain must come down yet again, gushing in a great spring flush. Likewise, what goes up into the global atmosphere in the form of pesticides, DDT, mercury and industrial pollutants must also come down in winter snows. And again, what lands up in Glacier is bound to come down in the spring. Cold and blustery climes such as the tops of Glacier Park's peaks are chemical reservoirs of sorts, Ingersoll said, holding eight or nine months worth of precipitation locked in snow and ice. Now scientists are turning an eye to what happens each spring when those chemicals pulse down in a flooding rush, washing through relatively pristine soils, lakes and streams. " You might say you don't really care what's happening with pollutants in remote, high-elevation mountain lakes, " said Dan Fagre. " But you should care, because in a couple months it will be flowing down a river near you. " Fagre is a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, studying climate change from his offices in Glacier National Park. His back yard is the northern-most stop for fellow USGS researcher Ingersoll, who collaborates with agencies such as the National Park Service and Forest Service to study snowpack chemistry in mountains from New Mexico to the Canadian border. After nearly 10 years in the field, Ingersoll and his colleagues have built up the biggest snowpack survey in the world, focusing on the icy heights of America's Rocky Mountains. Ingersoll is based in Colorado, where remote and " pristine " basins have for years shown unnatural loads of nitrates. Nitrogen is a key plant food, Fagre said, and as underwater plants bloomed amid the nitrate-laden meltwater, the ecology of Colorado's cold, clear, nutrient-poor mountain lakes began to change. And that was bad news for trout and other species that preferred the natural habitat. It was as if these mountain ecosystems were getting too much of a good thing all in one shot; as if somebody who always took one vitamin a day decided to hold off for eight months and then swallowed two bottles all at once. While the same nitrogen concentrations were falling in raindrops at low elevations, those doses were coming as steady storms, a little bit at a time. The snowpack, however, worked as a reservoir, holding back as much as 70 or 80 percent of the year's precipitation for nine months and then sending a one-time chemical rush downstream each spring. In addition, levels of atmospheric nitrogen have been more than doubled by humans since the dawning of the industrial age, further amplifying the polluting impacts of spring runoff. Over time, Ingersoll began to pinpoint sources of the chemical pollutants - large coal-fired power plants topped the list, joined by automobile exhaust, snowmobile emissions, and other industrial sources - that caused acid snow, a cold-climate cousin of the more well-known acid rain. Related studies showed increased humidity along Colorado's eastern front range, the result of agricultural irrigation. It was enough to affect local weather patterns, Fagre said, and contributed to the thunderstorms that swept off the prairie and dumped moisture in the Rocky Mountains. Along the way, those storms picked up fertilizer from fields and ammonia from stockyards, adding to the chemical stew locked on wintry peaks. That research got Fagre to wondering if Montana's mountains were similarly affected. Meanwhile, Canadian scientists were digging through snow 150 miles north of Glacier Park, discovering that the world is indeed a very small place. In remarkably remote basins, places that took days to ski into, the Canadians were finding toxic levels of pesticides and other chemicals in trout. These " persistent organic pollutants, " including DDT and dioxins, were a long way from home. Many of the chemicals found have been banned for years throughout North America. Yet here they were, building up in the tissue of fish living in what had been considered Mother Nature's last unsullied strongholds. Then, in 1998, satellite images provided a hint that helped unlock the mystery. Those images showed a plume of dust, rising from a massive sand storm in China's Gobi Desert, trailing around the globe astride a powerful jet stream. Analysis of dust collected throughout the Rockies confirmed suspicions - it was indeed China's sand. And the poisonous chemicals in Canada's fish were indeed Asia's pollutants, compounds of such light molecular weight that they were easily carried halfway around the world. Those two realizations - that Colorado's mountain snows were trapping regional air pollutants and that Canada's snowpacks were trapping global chemical pollutants - inspired Fagre to begin digging around in Glacier Park's wintry world. He understood the presence of nitrates and sulfates and ammoniums in Colorado, but the " persistent organic pollutants, " or " POPs, " were something of a mystery. How did such high levels of these chemicals build up in otherwise pristine lakes? The answer, it turned out, is the " grasshopper effect. " The chemicals discovered by the Canadians are extremely volatile, and in warm conditions easily vaporize into a gaseous form and zap back into the atmosphere. Then they cool, condense, fall as rain, sink into soils, warm under the sun, and zap back up again, leaping around the globe like grasshoppers. But it takes warmth to volatilize POPs; when they land in cold mountain lakes or on perennial snowpacks or atop icy glaciers, they stay put, a phenomenon called the " cold condensation effect. " Cold mountaintops, then, are POPs magnets, and the fish that live in mountain lakes are POPs sponges, accumulating the pollutants over time. " The question was, " Fagre said, " is this sort of thing happening here in Montana, in Glacier Park? " The answer meant climbing Glacier's steep backcountry when snows were at their deepest, digging pits all the way down to frozen dirt, sometimes through nearly 20 feet of snow. Fagre and his team dug snow samples at high elevation and low, on the east side of the Continental Divide and on the west. Ingersoll, meanwhile, skied up other mountains, digging his own snowpits and collecting his own samples. Ultimately, Fagre's work became part of the data being collected by Ingersoll, a northern cluster of sample sites on the long route between Glacier Park and Taos, N.M. But even now, with three years of samples behind him, Fagre still is hesitant to draw too many conclusions from his findings. " Science takes a while, " he cautioned. He has coupled his mountaintop work with a stream-monitoring program, measuring chemical concentrations in the snowmelt that burbles past campgrounds each summer in clear, cold brooks. Once that data is correlated with the snowpack information, scientists will try to determine what effects the chemical pollutants have on soil biota and aquatic life, he said. " The levels we've seen in Glacier so far are certainly high enough to be influencing some of our mountain ecosystems, " he said, " but not to the degree of what they've seen in Colorado. " But any fundamental change to an ecosystem will likely result in larger changes down the road, Fagre said. Change the snow chemistry and you change the soil chemistry; change the soil chemistry and you change the plants. Change the plants and you change the insects. Change the insects and you change the critters that eat the insects, and the critters that eat the critters that eat the insects, and so on up the food chain. Of course, at the end of that chain is humanfolk, living in the low lands that inevitably will collect what went up, once it comes back down. Already, scientists have determined that tiger salamanders can be greatly impacted by artificially acidic pH levels commonly observed in Colorado's most remote wilderness lands. Samples of meltwater in and around the Mount Zirkel Wilderness Area showed salamander eggs dead or nonviable due to acidity, and those that hatched successfully often matured more slowly and were less able to catch and eat tadpoles. Boreal toads, chorus frogs, northern leopard frogs and wood frogs also died in the acid snow runoff. Even rainbow trout eggs and fry showed increased mortality. Scientists in the low lands are starting to see the effects in popular waterways such as Flathead Lake, where officials are issuing warnings about mercury buildup in sport fish. Even tiny amounts of mercury - thought to be originating in far-flung sites around the globe and falling here with rain and snow - can cause sickness, birth defects and death. The fact is, no matter where you live in the world, no matter how remote or pristine your back yard, there is no way to avoid toxic chemicals from the other side of the globe. Every nation, every industrial plant and every individual, all share the same atmosphere, and that atmosphere is becoming increasingly clouded with chemical pollutants. If you live where it rains, expect a slow, steady dose. If you live under snowy peaks, expect a once-a-year flood. " We're all awash in this global chemical soup, " Fagre said, " and so we have to change our focus. We used to be concerned about being down wind of a factory or a city; now, we're thinking in terms of global air movements. " And those global air movements have folks like Kathy Tonnessen worried, as she looks to the probable future of any number of developing countries. Tonnessen is a Park Service research coordinator, and has 20 years of experience studying the interaction of air and surface water in Western mountains. She recognizes that airborne pollutants held in snowpack can acidify streams when released, can change soil biota, impact water quality, affect plants and animals. Although the United States and Canada have cleaned up their act somewhat with regard to nitrates, sulfates, amoniums and even POPs, she said, other countries are just gearing up to become major polluters. " The problem will get worse before it gets better, " Tonnessen predicts, " and it will come from Asia, India, Japan, China, Korea. " An air mass can cruise from China to Olympic National Park in five days, she said, bringing along with it any number of chemical compounds. Which is why Ingersoll can be said to be skiing across bits and pieces of Asia as he slogs his way to the top of Apgar Mountain. His work in this wintry world is helping to define the parameters of the problem, giving guidance to those who are trying to forge solutions. One solution under consideration is to just eat the pollution. Bio-engineers are hard at work trying to find bugs that will consume the stuff, effectively scrubbing the atmospheric environment, but the clock is ticking. Another possible solution, called the " dirty dozen " treaty, is expected to be signed in Stockholm this May, when the nations of the world gather to collectively ban the 12 worst POPs. But these " persistent organic pollutants " are not called persistent for nothing, and a ban will take years to show effects. The United States banned DDT years ago, and still the poison volatilizes out of domestic soil, leaping like a grasshopper into mountain lakes where it is caught by the cold. " We have our own problems that will be hard enough to solve, but the real huge threat will be the Third World across the Pacific, " Tonnessen said. " China is the biggie. " As China and India attempt to create modern industrial economies and work to feed their billions of citizens, she said, chilly spots like the Arctic and the Rockies can expect to collect the fallout. " When they get the technology we have, the nitrogen load into the atmosphere will be staggering, " she said. " And we will be on the receiving end of all of it. " The United States already is cleaning up, she said, and along with Canada is helping Mexico run a cleaner economy, all in hopes of avoiding more acid rain and snow. " But guess what folks - it's still out there, right across the ocean, " she said, " and all it takes is a couple days of wind to bring it snowing down on a Montana mountain. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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