时间:2025-05-01 14:14:51 来源:网络整理编辑:知識
The National Park Service mission statement breathes some grand words: The conservation agency inten
The National Park Service mission statement breathes some grand words: The conservation agency intends to preserve the country's natural resources "for the enjoyment, education, and inspiration of this and future generations."
But the Park Service can't keep out air pollution.
A new report published by the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) concluded that a whopping 85 percent of parks contend with unhealthy air. The problem is a respiratory toxin regularly created and found in U.S. cities, called ozone. The NPCA found ozone to be a "significant" concern in 87 parks, and a "moderate" issue in 267 parks.
This air pollution wafts into national parks from our potent industrial areas. There's no way to keep it out.
"We’re producing something that's being brought to the pristine areas -- it impacts our remote and thought-to-be-clean places," said Gabriele Pfister, deputy director of the National Center of Atmospheric Research’s atmospheric chemistry lab who had no involvement in the report.
"Ozone is toxic. It damages our airways," she added.
Tweet may have been deleted
Ozone comes to life when emissions from vehicles, fossil-fuel power plants, and industry release invisible gases called nitrous oxides, or NOx, into the air. When the sun hits these gases -- along with a mix of other chemicals called volatile organic compounds (VOCs) -- it then creates ozone. "In the morning, the sun comes up, and you start cooking it," explained Pfister. "You start creating ozone."
In some places -- like Pfister's nearby Rocky Mountain National Park -- this air pollution is lifted by normal, rising wind patterns into the mountains.
But pristine, forested land can also make its own ozone. Trees, bushes, and other plants all naturally emit compounds into the air that react with NOx gases and make ozone, explained Anthony Wexler, director of the UC Davis Air Quality Research Center who took no part in the research.
"You’ll see ozone concentrations in places that aren’t emitting much NOx," said Wexler. "The NOx comes from what we do."
SEE ALSO:Fearless TV weather forecasters air the planet's soaring carbon levelsThe solution, at least on paper, is simple. Producing energy and fuel without the combustion processes that make NOx. "Low amounts of NOx would mean low amounts ozone," emphasized Wexler.
In reality, of course, transforming the nation's energy system will require enormous political and societal ambition.
Although there's still ozone swirling around many national parks -- especially those near industrialized areas -- things are certainly much better today than in the 1970s, when air pollution was so bad that Los Angelenos could taste the foul air. This is thanks to the Clean Air Act, which mandated that automakers and industry slash their polluting emissions. "The story is we’ve done a lot to clean up air pollution," said Wexler. "It's a whole lot better than it used to be."
But clearly, air pollution still remains. And in many national parks, you'll breathe it.
Then, of course, there's the growing problem of wildfires -- which create tiny bits of pollution called particulate matter that saturate the skies in many national parks. It's the burnt forest, floating through the air, and there will be more it: A more potent fire regime has emerged out West. Overall, wildfires in the U.S. are burning twice as much land as they were in the early 1980s and they’re burning for weeks, not days, longer.
During the summer of 2018, smoke filled Yosemite Valley. In a large swath of the West, the worst days of particulate pollution are getting worse.
Breathing particulate pollution is bad for your heart, as a number of studies have linked breathing this matter to accelerated heart disease. Meanwhile, ozone damages airways, exacerbates asthma, and -- with prolonged exposure -- can result in premature death, explained Pfister.
That's why Pfister often goes hiking in the morning, before sunlight reacts with NOx to form ozone, which can then find its way into her huffing lungs. "The early bird gets the worm," she said.
But hundreds of millions of national park visitors are inevitably exposed to elevated ozone levels each year. It's a product of our industrialized society, for now.
"When people think of iconic parks like Joshua Tree or the Grand Canyon, they think of unspoiled landscapes and scenic views," said NPCA president Theresa Pierno,in a statement. "I think they would be shocked to know that these are actually some of our most polluted national parks."
Fyvush Finkel, Emmy winner for 'Picket Fences,' dies at 932025-05-01 14:07
拯救男友災難的拍照技術,你還差一個自拍神器相機3602025-05-01 14:04
橙光亮相廣州螢火蟲漫展 粉絲齊聚打call2025-05-01 13:14
Amazon Spring Sale pizza oven deal: save 20% on the Solo Stove Pi Prime2025-05-01 13:13
There's a big piece of fake chicken stuck to this phone case2025-05-01 12:11
酸香鬱冽味幽長 PP視頻《尋味中國》帶你體驗鎮江醋文化2025-05-01 12:05
C位女神熱辣開秀 奇秀吃瓜王榮耀誕生2025-05-01 11:56
風靡全球的大胃王聯盟落地上海 ,挑戰你的中國胃2025-05-01 11:52
Samsung Galaxy Note7 teardown reveals the magic behind the phone's iris scanner2025-05-01 11:49
點亮震旦大屏 ,朱正廷外灘上演完美日記2025-05-01 11:34
Slack goes down again, prompting anxiety everywhere2025-05-01 14:09
《一路驚喜》真人秀欄目組攜手龍族科技 尋找最強正能量2025-05-01 14:03
決戰“山城”,特步熱煉工場潮人運動街趴來了!2025-05-01 13:44
探索瀕危動物現狀 BRICKLIVE(磚享)動物王國環保展一北京站開幕2025-05-01 13:12
Mall builds real2025-05-01 13:09
2018上海CJ最走心遊玩攻略新鮮出爐,快來pick你最喜歡的展台 !2025-05-01 12:44
C位女神熱辣開秀 奇秀吃瓜王榮耀誕生2025-05-01 12:40
《一路驚喜》真人秀欄目組攜手龍族科技 尋找最強正能量2025-05-01 12:24
Two states took big steps this week to get rid of the tampon tax2025-05-01 12:02
常平溫泉小鎮中秋獻禮,上黨老街開街慶典全陣容公布2025-05-01 11:42