The strict new federal standards
limiting pollution from power plants are meant to safeguard human
health. But they should have an important side benefit, according to a
study being released on Tuesday: protecting a broad array of wildlife
that has been harmed by mercury emissions.
Songbirds and bats suffer some of the same types of neurological
disorders from mercury as humans and especially children do, says the
study, “Hidden Risk,” by the Biodiversity Research Institute, a nonprofit organization in Gorham, Me., that investigates emerging environmental threats.
Methylmercury, the most toxic form of the heavy metal, was found to be
widespread throughout the Northeast — not just in lakes and rivers, as
had already been known, but also in forests, on mountaintops and in bogs
and marshes that are home to birds long thought to be at minimal risk.
The new study found dangerously high levels of mercury in several
Northeastern bird species, including rusty blackbirds, saltmarsh
sparrows and wood thrushes. Previous studies have shown mercury’s
effects on loons and other fish-eating waterfowl, as well as bald
eagles, panthers and otters. In one study, zebra finches lost the
ability to hit high notes in mating songs when mercury levels rose,
affecting reproduction.
“We’re seeing many other species in a much larger landscape of harm from
mercury,” said the principal author, David C. Evers, who is the
institute’s executive director. He called the Environmental Protection
Agency’s new mercury standards, adopted last month and scheduled to take
effect over the next four years, “an excellent step forward in reducing
and minimizing the impact on ecosystems and improving ecological
health, and therefore our own health.”
Mercury, which occurs naturally in the earth, is released into the air
when coal is burned in power plants. The gaseous mercury can drift
hundreds of miles before settling back to earth, sometimes along with
rain. The mercury can be absorbed by tree leaves; when they fall to the
ground they are swarmed by bacteria and other organisms that convert the
mercury to its organic form. The organic form, methylmercury, is a
neurotoxin that can enter the food chain. Small insects, worms and
snails that feed on forest litter absorb the mercury. In turn, they are
eaten by birds and other small animals, and so on through the food
chain.
Dr. Evers said levels of contamination were highest in habitats like
marshes and beaver ponds that go through cycles of wet and dry, even if
they are far from power plants. He also found that threshold levels at
which some species begin to feel the effects of mercury are much lower
than previously thought.
Songbirds with blood mercury levels of just 0.7 parts per million
generally showed a 10 percent reduction in the rate at which eggs
successfully hatched. As mercury increases, reproduction decreases. At
mercury levels of greater than 1.7 parts per million, the ability of
eggs to hatch is reduced by more than 30 percent, according to the
study.
Over all, birds in contaminated sites were found to be three times as
likely to abandon their nests or exhibit abnormal incubation or feeding
behavior. In some nests, the chicks seemed to have been affected most;
they vocalized less and did not beg as aggressively to be fed.
Such consequences mimic the effects of mercury on humans whose primary
contact with the toxin is through the consumption of fish. The
contamination can be passed to children in the womb or while they are
nursing, damaging their nervous systems and impairing their ability to
learn.
“It’s incredibly important that someone is following what is happening
to these birds,” said Joanna Burger, a behavioral ecologist at Rutgers
University who has studied mercury contamination in animals. “The birds
not only act as sentinels to what is happening in nature, but the
results of these studies propose hypotheses for effects that have not
yet been identified for people.”
Dr. Evers has been studying mercury in terrestrial species for 11 years
across 11 states, from Virginia to Maine, continually adding new species
and ecosystems. In the latest study, done in cooperation with the
Nature Conservancy, biologists found that little brown bats, already
stressed by white nose syndrome in the Northeast, accumulate substantial
amounts of mercury because they can live up to 30 years — three times
as long as songbirds.
The mercury is believed to cause bats to act erratically, and in some
cases to lose their adeptness at avoiding wind turbine blades.
“What people don’t realize is that our rain isn’t just acidic,” said
Timothy H. Tear, director of science for the Nature Conservancy in New
York. “It is neurotoxic.”
The effects of mercury can lead to the degradation of entire ecosystems,
Dr. Tear explained. “You don’t see birds falling off tree limbs because
they have too much mercury,” he said, “but they’re not doing the job
they used to.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/24/science/study-finds-mercury-in-more-northeastern-bird-species.html |