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Crater Lake National
Park News
Airborne Contaminants Found in Western U.S. and Alaskan National
Parks
National Park Service web site
February 28, 2008
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Snow sampling at Mount
Rainier National Park, Washington;
photo courtesy National Park Service
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The Western Airborne Contaminants
Assessment Project (WACAP) was initiated to determine the
risk from airborne contaminants to ecosystems and food webs
in eight core parks: six west coast and Alaska national
parks (Sequoia, Mount Rainier, Olympic, Denali, Gates of the
Arctic, Noatak) and two parks in the Rocky Mountains (Rocky
Mountain and Glacier). Analysis of
the concentration and biological effects of airborne
contaminants in air, snow, water, sediment, lichen, conifer
needles, and fish was conducted from 2002 through 2007.
Atmospheric transport patterns were also assessed in order
to identify potential sources of contaminants to parks. Air
and vegetation samples were also collected at twelve
secondary parks (Bandelier, Big Bend, Crater Lake, Glacier
Bay, Grand Teton, Great Sand Dunes, Katmai, Lassen Volcanic,
North Cascades, Stikine-LeConte Wilderness, Wrangell-St.
Elias, and Yosemite) throughout the course of the study.
Key findings from the 8 core WACAP parks:
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Measurable amounts of both current use and historic
(banned in the U.S.) contaminants were found in snow,
water, vegetation, fish and lake sediment at all 8
parks;
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Parks nearest agricultural areas (Sequoia, Rocky
Mountain, Glacier) contained higher levels of both
currently used pesticides and pesticides banned some
decades ago;
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Historical records of contaminants in lake sediments
showed that the ban in the U.S. (in the 70s - 90s) of
several key contaminants (e.g., DDTs, dieldrin,
chlordanes) has served to reduce deposition of these
compounds to lake sediments in some parks further away
from agricultural sources, but they are continuing to
accumulate in lake sediments of many parks close to
agricultural sources;
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Contaminants generally increased with elevation, so
high elevation areas in parks may be at extra risk for
contamination;
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Contaminant concentrations of mercury in fish in
many parks exceeded risk thresholds for health impacts
to fish-eating birds and mammals, while concentrations
of DDT in some fish at Sequoia and Glacier and
chlordanes in one fish at Glacier exceeded risk
thresholds for health impacts to fish-eating birds;
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Concentrations of mercury, dieldrin, and DDT found
in fish from some parks exceeded EPA human health
thresholds;
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Some "intersex" fish (male and female reproductive
structures in the same fish) were found in Rocky
Mountain and Glacier (but not in any of the other 6
parks in the study); and
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Some "new" contaminants like PBDEs (flame retardants
commonly applied to furniture fabric) show increases in
deposition to park ecosystems.
The scientific investigators for the project
included the Environmental Protection Agency, the US Geological
Survey, the US Forest Service, Oregon State University, and the
University of Washington. A final report is now available,
including park-specific overviews of results for each of the 8
parks. A database containing all of
the laboratory results will also be made available on the NPS
WACAP website later this year.
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Sampling fish
for contaminants at Denali National Park and Preserve,
Alaska; photo courtesy National Park Service
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Sediment coring
at Gates of the Arctic National Park and
Preserve, Alaska;
photo courtesy National Park Service
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