Airborne Contaminants Study Released Measurable Levels Detected
in Twenty Western U.S. and Alaska National Parks
National Park Service News
Release
February 26th, 2008
For Immediate Release:
 |
February 26, 2008 |
| Contact(s): |
David Barna, 202-208-6843

Colleen Flanagan, 303-969-2011 |
WASHINGTON, DC – According to a study released
by the Western Airborne Contaminants Assessment Project (WACAP),
numerous airborne contaminants, including heavy metals and both
current-use and North American historic-use pesticides, have
been detected at measurable levels in ecosystems at twenty
western U.S. and Alaska national parks from the Arctic to the
Mexican border. The eight core national park areas studied were
Glacier, Mount Rainier, Olympic, Rocky Mountain, Sequoia & Kings
Canyon, Denali, Gates of the Arctic, and Noatak. The study was
funded primarily by the National Park Service (NPS) to evaluate
the potential threats to park ecosystems and likely sources of
these contaminants.
While the extent of the effects on wildlife
depending upon fish for survival is unknown, the risk to people
is considered low and varies given location, frequency and type
of fish consumption. How scientific data are used to make
recommendations for people’s diets varies between states, as
health risks associated with exposure to contaminants in select
fish may be outweighed by the benefits of continued consumption
of traditional foods. Most people are not likely to eat enough
of the contaminated fish to be at risk.
Key findings from the six-year, multi-agency
study indicate that out of over 100 organic contaminants tested,
70 were found at detectable levels in snow, water, vegetation,
lake sediment, and fish. While concentrations of most of these
contaminants were below levels of concern, others appear to be
accumulating in sensitive resources such as fish. For some
contaminants, high concentrations in fish have exceeded
fish-eating wildlife and/or human health consumption thresholds
in many of the eight core parks studied.
Results from this project add considerably to
the state of the science concerning contaminant transport and
subsequent biological and ecological effects in remote
ecosystems in the western U.S. “These well-documented and
carefully analyzed data will provide a basis for evaluating
future changes in the status of these ecosystems,” said Dr.
Dixon Landers of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
and the project’s Science Lead.
The analysis of fish tissue provided a window
into the contaminant situation in various parks, regardless of
what fish species were sampled, said Landers. Given that the
knowledge of contaminant concentrations in particular species
may aid members of the public when making personal health
decisions, the list of fish species sampled in lakes at the
eight core parks follows: lake trout from Noatak, Gates of the
Arctic, and Wonder Lake at Denali; burbot and whitefish from
McLeod Lake at Denali; cutthroat trout from Glacier; brook trout
from Olympic, Mount Rainier, Sequoia, and Lone Pine Lake at
Rocky Mountain; and rainbow trout from Mills Lake at Rocky
Mountain. Nevertheless, any one fish species, or lake, excluded
from the above list is not necessarily exempt from contaminant
concentrations of concern.
Evidence suggests that the contaminants found
in this study are carried in air masses from sources as far away
as Europe and Asia, and as near as the local county. According
to Landers, the presence of contaminants in snow is
well-correlated with the proximity of each park to agricultural
areas, pointing to these areas as probable major sources of
these contaminants. In Alaska parks, with little nearby
agriculture in the region, there are very low concentrations of
most current-use compounds. However, concentrations of
historic-use chemicals in Alaska systems are similar to those in
the other parks sampled, suggesting greater influence from
global atmospheric transport.
The three contaminants of highest concern for
human and wildlife health included: 1) Mercury – a heavy metal
emitted through processes such as burning coal for electricity
that causes neurological and reproductive impairment; 2)
Dieldrin – an acutely toxic insecticide banned from use in the
U.S. since 1987 that decreases the effectiveness of the immune
system; and 3) DDT – an insecticide banned in the U.S. since
1972 that reduces reproductive success.
Average mercury concentrations in fish from
Alaska’s Noatak National Preserve were above the EPA human
health threshold for consumption (i.e., adults eating 2.3 meals
of these fish per month), while mercury concentrations in some
fish exceeded the threshold at Gates of the Arctic, Olympic,
Mount Rainier, and Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks.
Dieldrin concentrations in fish from Rocky Mountain, Sequoia &
Kings Canyon, and Glacier National Parks exceeded the health
threshold for recreational fishermen (i.e., adults eating 2.3
meals of these fish per month). Dieldrin concentrations also
exceeded health thresholds for subsistence fish consumption
(i.e., adults eating 19 meals of these fish per month) at all
national parks, except Olympic. Average DDT concentrations in
fish exceeded the human risk threshold for subsistence fishers
at Sequoia & Kings Canyon and in Oldman Lake at Glacier National
Park.
Concentrations of contaminants in fish were
also compared to health thresholds for fish-eating wildlife.
Mercury concentrations in fish at all eight parks exceeded
health thresholds suggested for birds, and were above mammal
health thresholds at some parks. DDT concentrations in fish
exceeded the fish-eating bird health threshold in Glacier and
Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks.
In Rocky Mountain and Glacier National Parks,
some individual trout were “intersex” (i.e., male and female
reproductive structures in the same fish). This condition is
commonly associated with exposure to certain contaminants (e.g.,
dieldrin and DDT) that mimic the hormone estrogen. Because the
sample size was small, however, the extent of the problem and
correlation between fish reproductive effects and contaminant
concentrations has not been established for parks in the study.
Concentrations of current-use pesticides and
other compounds, such as the commonly used flame-retardant, PBDE,
were detected at Rocky Mountain and Mount Rainier National
Parks, but concentrations in fish did not exceed human or
wildlife health consumption thresholds. Exposure to PBDEs
affects liver, thyroid and neurobehavioral development. Other
participating institutions included the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, the U.S. Geological Survey, the U.S. Forest
Service, Oregon State University and the University of
Washington. National park resource managers worked with
scientists from the collaborating agencies to plan and conduct
the WACAP study.
For additional information on WACAP findings
and implications, contact Dr. Dixon Landers at 541-754-4427 or
e-mail Landers.Dixon@epamail.epa.gov (USEPA, National Health and
Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Western Ecology
Division, Corvallis, OR).
-NPS-