Environmental Pollution Guide

Environmental Pollution Section


 

Environmental Pollution Navigation

Main Home Page
Tell A Friend about us
Environmental Pollution Acid Rain |
Environmental Pollution Control |
Environmental Outcry About Pollution China |
Exhibition About Environmental Pollution |
Best Of Environmental Pollution |
Environmental Pollution Cases In Devon Pennsylvania |
Whats Environmental Pollution |
Environmental Pollution Made By Sulphuric Acid |
Quotes Against Environmental Pollution |
Environmental Effects Of Water Pollution |

List of Environmental-Pollution Articles

Environmental Pollution Best seller

Buy it Now!



Sitemap

"Tennis has to become everything to you if you're going to make it to the top. You have to live it."

by Monica Seles

"Hope is the only bee that makes honey without flowers."

by Robert Green Ingersoll

"Hawaii is not a state of mind, but a state of grace."

by Paul Theroux

"I had to stop driving my car for a while... the tires got dizzy."

by Steven Wright

"The library is the temple of learning, and learning has liberated more people than all the wars in history."

by Carl T. Rowan



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Environmental-Pollution
Email:
First Name:


Main Environmental Pollution sponsors


 

Newest Best Sellers


 

Welcome to Environmental Pollution Guide

 

Environmental Pollution Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Agricultural Chemicals And Environmental Pollution: Is There A Connection? Ask The Earthworms

from:


The sector of the population known in conservative circles as "alarmists" (read: anyone who considers environmental pollution to be a serious topic) have long speculated gloomily about the link between agricultural chemicals and environmental pollution. It stands to reason, they assert, that agricultural chemicals and environmental pollution be linked. The agricultural chemicals most often linked to environmental pollution include veterinary medicines, pesticides, non-organic fertilizers, and other chemicals designed to eradicate disease in crops and animals on American farms. Since these chemicals are responsible essentially for poisoning forms of life (yes, Virginia, diseases are forms of life too), it stands to reason, "alarmists" say, that we should be concerned about runoff from the application of agricultural chemicals entering our groundwater, streams, and soil.

Conservatives wouldn't even bother to debate on some points. Even since the publication of Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring", it's been well known that pesticides in the environment--DDT in particular--are responsible for the massive die-offs of birds in regions of America that depend on agriculture for survival. And it's equally well-known that veterinary hormones and other chemicals used in agriculture have harmful effects on human beings upon direct exposure.

The point of debate isn't that there's a link between agricultural chemicals and environmental pollution. The point of debate is that we should be troubled by that link, and by the dependence on agricultural chemicals found in many factory and smaller farms. Sure, these chemicals hurt us, say the conservatives. But they can't be hurting us all that badly. The link between agricultural chemicals and environmental pollution is there, but it's nothing to worry about.

What we needed in order to resolve the debate was a good method of quantifying the amount of damage agricultural chemicals were doing and the amount of environmental pollution they were creating. Now, thanks to researchers at the US Geological Survey and Colorado State University at Pueblo, we have that method: earthworms.

These researchers collected soil samples from three fields. One field had been treated with biosolid fertilizers. One had been treated with pig manure. The third, the control field, hadn't been treated with fertilizer in seven years. The researchers extracted earthworms from the soil samples and tested them for traces of 77 known dangerous chemicals used in agriculture.

They expected to find traces of these chemicals in the biosolid and pig manure fields, and they did: some 20 dangerous chemicals in each. The surprise came when they tested the control field, the one that hadn't been exposed to chemicals in years. Seven dangerous chemicals were found infesting the bodies of the earthworms.

There is a link between agricultural chemicals and environmental pollution--even in places where agricultural chemicals aren't directly applied to the environment.

So we must ask: when is it proper for an alarmist to start raising an alarm?


 

Environmental Pollution News

Air pollution plan of Maricopa County is rejected by EPA

The Environmental Protection Agency said Friday it would reject Maricopa County's plan to clean up the Valley's dirty air, a decision that could deprive the region of billions of dollars in transportation projects.

Read more...


Pollution at lake wasn’t by poop this time

The Environmental Protection Agency said Missouri highway builders may have polluted the Lake of the Ozarks.

Read more...


Hong Kong Air Pollution `Very High' at All 3 Monitoring Roadside Stations

Hong Kong’s Air Pollution Index reached “very high” levels above 100 at all three roadside monitoring stations this morning, the Environmental Protection Department said on its website. It was the seventh consecutive day for the city to have readings at that level, which triggers a government warning that people with heart or respiratory illnesses should avoid prolonged stays in heavy traffic ...

Read more...


Alleged Martin Lake pollution violations focus of lawsuitEnvironmental groups allege Luminant not being forced to pay ...

Several environmental groups led by the Sierra Club on Thursday filed a federal lawsuit against Texas-based power plant operator Luminant alleging it has been getting by with air pollution violations at the Martin Lake Power Plant without paying fines that should be attached to those violations.

Read more...


EPA: Pollution outside Lincoln Park school within standards

Industrial air pollution outside a school in Chicago 's Lincoln Park neighborhood is well below federal safety standards, officials announced today in a report that attempted to allay longstanding fears about nearby factories. However, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's report acknowledges the wind rarely blew toward St. Josaphat School on days when pollution samples were collected last ...

Read more...