Natural Resource Year in Review--2001National Park Service; U.S. Department of the Interior; arrowhead logo
HomeYear at a GlanceForewordIntroductionChapterChapter 1--Meeting the ChallengeChapter 2--Science-Based ManagementChapter 3--National Parks as LaboratoriesChapter 4--Marine and Coastal Resource ProtectionChapter 5--Managing RisksChapter 6--RestorationChapter 7--Collaboration and Public ParticipationChapter 8--Looking Ahead    Search      Archive  
 
Alaskan brown bear catching salmon at Katmai National Park
Courtesy of Karen Selleck


Back to Chapter 5: Managing Risks

Articles

Preserving endangered night skies
By Dan Duriscoe and Chadwick A. Moore

Protecting American ginseng
By Janet Rock

Incident management team develops foot-and-mouth disease plans
By Peter Dratch and Kris Fister

An overview of invasive exotic plant management strategies in the Northeast
By Kathleen Kodish Reeder

Eradicating rats from Anacapa Island
By Kate Faulkner, Gregg Howald, and Steve Ortega


Other Developments

Mosquito surveillance in the National Capital Region

Battling alien fish in Yellowstone Lake

Award-winner Profile - Hawaii Volcanoes resource manager honored

  Other Developments
Focus on toxic airborne pollutants
In 2001 the National Park Service began a concerted effort to determine if toxic airborne pollutants are affecting park resources in the western United States. Pollutants of concern are “persistent organic pollutants” such as DDT, PCBs, and furans, and metals such as mercury. These pollutants can travel long distances (in some cases from Europe and Asia), persist in the environment for a long time, and tend to accumulate at higher levels of the food chain, causing toxic effects in fish, mammals, and humans who consume them. The NPS air toxics monitoring effort is a five-year process that began in 2001 with strategic planning and a pilot study. The next three years will focus on monitoring snow, lake sediments, plants, and fish or mammal tissue at six selected parks in Alaska and the western United States. The final year of the effort will focus on data analysis and reporting. Dixon Landers, a scientist with the Environmental Protection Agency, is on loan to the NPS Air Resources Division to lead the project. The effort will involve coordination with a variety of groups, including the six focus parks, the NPS Inventory and Monitoring Program, the Water Resources Division, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, USGS, and others.

This material is from Natural Resource Year in Review--2001, published by the National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, in May 2001 (publication D-2255)
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Last Updated: 7/4/2002