No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
The Secret Killer of Puget Sound Salmon — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

The Secret Killer of Puget Sound Salmon — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

Utah Digital News by Utah Digital News
July 30, 2022
in Nature
0
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter



By Eric Wagner, Freelance Writer

The Ship Canal Bridge is a double-deck steel truss that looms nearly two hundred feet above Portage Bay, between Lake Washington and Lake Union in Seattle. More than 200,000 cars pass over this bridge every day, as they have for fifty years, whipping north or south along the twelve lanes that make up Interstate 5. Stand under the bridge at North Passage Point Park, on the shore of Portage Bay, and you can hear the surging hum of all those tires as they whoosh far above you. And if you happen to be in the park during one of the region’s many rainstorms—even one that seems brief and light—you can watch veils of water cascade from the bridge overhead into the bay below. Below your feet, meanwhile, you hear rushing water as it gathers from thousands of acres of Green Lake, Aurora, and north Seattle streets, consolidated into a single pipe that dumps it, untreated, into the canal.

That stormwater, scientists now know, is full of toxic chemicals. But one in particular has caught their attention: N-(1,3-dimethylbutyl)-N′-phenyl-p-phenylenediamine; or, as it’s called in shorthand, 6PPD-quinone. An industrial chemical, 6PPD-quinone is used as an antioxidant in rubber tires. Every time a car or truck drives, friction causes tiny bits of tire to flake off onto the road. Those bits and all the toxins they contain—including 6PPD-quinone—lie there until stormwater picks them up and carries them away as runoff to the nearest stream, creek, lake, or river.





Source link

You might also like

Building Washington’s Sustainable Future — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

Building Washington’s Sustainable Future — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

March 22, 2023
Strong Momentum for Climate in Olympia — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

Strong Momentum for Climate in Olympia — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

March 18, 2023
Utah Digital News

Utah Digital News

Related Stories

Building Washington’s Sustainable Future — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

Building Washington’s Sustainable Future — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

by Utah Digital News
March 22, 2023
0

In service of better understanding Washington’s intersecting land use and energy needs, and in partnership with industry-leading energy researchers, TNC...

Strong Momentum for Climate in Olympia — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

Strong Momentum for Climate in Olympia — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

by Utah Digital News
March 18, 2023
0

We’re enthusiastic about HB 1176, which establishes a Washington Climate Corps Network to support climate-related service opportunities for young adults...

A Fellowship for Nature-Based Solutions to Climate Change — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

A Fellowship for Nature-Based Solutions to Climate Change — The Nature Conservancy in Washington

by Utah Digital News
March 2, 2023
0

Witnessing and participating in TNC's conservation work in this new cultural context has been an incredible experience of learning and...

Does Otis the bear inspire support for conservation?

Does Otis the bear inspire support for conservation?

by Utah Digital News
February 23, 2023
0

480 Otis on July 1, 2022. Photo courtesy C. Rohdenburg By Mike Fitz If you watch any of the wildlife...

Next Post
Ella G. Berry: Civic and Political Activist

Ella G. Berry: Civic and Political Activist

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

utahdigitalnews.com

© 2022 utahdigitalnews.com

No Result
View All Result

© 2022 utahdigitalnews.com