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Forests, damaged by acid rain

Acid rain has been a problem for many years but legislation passed toward the end of the last century has begun to address this issue. In 1990, Congress passed several amendments to the Clean Air Act that included provisions requiring electrical utilities to lower SO2 emissions. Since then, SO2 emissions have decreased and rain in the northeastern United States has become somewhat less acidic. With time, and with continued enforcement of the acid rain regulation, lakes, streams, and forests damaged by acid rain should recover. [Pg.104]

In addition to the damage acid rain causes to structures, acid rain also affects natural environments. Significant loss of spruce forests due to the burning of spruce needles by acid rain has occurred in Scandinavia. Acid rain also extracts a heavy toll on aquatic systems and associated organisms. Most adult fish cannot tolerate pHs much lower than 5.0, and even the most tolerant species will not survive below a pH of 4.0. Fish larvae are even more susceptible to low pH levels. Insects and their larvae also perish when pH approaches 4.0 in aquatic systems. Numerous lakes in upstate New... [Pg.165]

The toxicity of aluminum has been recognized most clearly by the development of bone disease caused by deposition of A1 in bones of patients on hemodialysis and in infants on intravenous therapy/ 6 Excessive A1 in the water used for dialysis may also cause brain damage. Dietary aluminum may be one cause of Alzheimer s disease/ h but this is controversial as is a possible role of aluminum in vaccines in causing inflammation in muscle.1) Solubilization of soil aluminum by acid rain has been blamed for the decline of forests in Europe and North America,) for the death of fish in acid waters,k and for very large reductions in yield for many crops/ An aluminum-resistant strain of buckwheat makes and secretes from its roots large amounts of oxalate which binds and detoxifies the Al3+ ions. ... [Pg.658]

Beginning in the 1970s, acid rain was identified as a serious issue in Europe, most prominently in Scandinavia and in the Black Triangle, a large swath of Poland, the Czech Republic, and southeastern Germany that suffered from acute forest damage induced by acid rain. Acid rain is a rapidly... [Pg.303]

When acid rain falls or flows into lakes and streams, it makes them more acidic. Some species of aquatic animals— such as trout, bass, snails, salamanders, and dams—cannot tolerate the increased acidity and die. This then disturbs the ecosystem of the lake, resulting in imbalances that may lead to the death of other aquatic species. Acid rain also weakens trees by dissolving nutrients in the soil and by damaging their leaves. Appalachian red spruce trees have been the hardest hit, with many forests showing significant acid rain damage. [Pg.146]

Plate 35 Damage of Forest by Acid Rain at Waldschaeden, Germany 1998 Waldschaeden Erzgebirge by bdk (see Chap. 6)... [Pg.237]

Every year acid rain causes hundreds of millions of dollars worth of damage to stone buildings and statues throughout the world. The term stone leprosy is used by some environmental chemists to describe the corrosion of stone by acid rain (Figure 21.20). Acid rain is also toxic to vegetation and aquatic life. Many well-documented cases show dramatically how acid rain has destroyed agricultural and forest lands and killed aquatic organisms. [Pg.843]

Acid deposition occurs when sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide emissions are transformed in the atmosphere and return to the earth in rain, fog or snow. Approximately 20 million tons of SOj are emitted annually in the United States, mostly from the burning of fossil fuels by electric utilities. Acid rain damages lakes, harms forests and buildings, contributes to reduced visibility, and is suspected of damaging health. [Pg.401]

At one point it was assumed that the earth, its oceans and rivers, and its atmosphere were so vast or self-cleansing that we could discharge anything into them without damage to our planet. We now know this is not true. Currently, we must deal with toxic waste dumps, with smog, with acid rain that kills forests, and with pollution of rivers and the ocean by chemical discharges. How did this happen ... [Pg.151]

Prolonged exposure to acid rain causes forest soils to lose valuable nutrients. It also increases the concentration of aluminum in the soil, which interferes with the uptake of nutrients by the trees. Lack of nutrients causes trees to grow more slowly or to stop growing altogether. More visible damage, such as defoliation, may show up later. Trees exposed to acid rain may also have more difficulty withstanding other stresses, such as drought, disease, insect pests and cold weather. [Pg.337]

The effects of acid rain can be seen in lakes and streams, in forests, and on all kinds of structures. The lowered pH kills fish eggs, fish, and many other organisms that live in lakes and streams. In forests, the acid can kill the leaves and needles of trees. It damages the soil by depleting it of nutrients, which stunts plant growth. Acid rain also eats away at the surfaces of buildings and other structures. Structures made of marble and other calcium-containing stone are particularly sensitive to acid rain. [Pg.77]


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