日韩色综合-日韩色中色-日韩色在线-日韩色哟哟-国产ts在线视频-国产suv精品一区二区69

手機APP下載

您現在的位置: 首頁 > 在線廣播 > PBS高端訪談 > PBS訪談環境系列 > 正文

pbs高端訪談:污染物隨降雨進入水體致有毒雞尾酒

編輯:melody ?  可可英語APP下載 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet
  


掃描二維碼進行跟讀打分訓練

JEFFREY BROWN:For those stations not taking a pledge break, we go beneath Washington’s Puget Sound to look at stormwater runoff.

Our story comes from our colleagues at KCTS9 in Seattle. Katie Campbell reports for Earth Fix, a public media project focused on environment reporting in the northwest.

KATIE CAMPBELL:Laura James has been diving in Puget Sound for more that 20 years.

LAURA JAMES, DIVER: Just the feeling of being weightless, it’s just like flying. The animals are fantastic and so different than anything you’ll ever see up here on the surface. It’s kind of like going into wonderland.

I don’t think that people realize what a gem we have. It’s the Emerald Sea. It’s got so much life. The cold water has more nutrients; it can hold more oxygen, hold more nutrients than warm water, so you get tremendous invertebrate marine life. You get octopus and wolf eels and all sorts of sea slugs, just every color of the rainbow.

You go beneath the sea, and it’s you’re in this different world, and it’s mesmerizing and brilliant.

KATIE CAMPBELL: One day, she came across something in the water that has haunted her ever since.

LAURA JAMES:We were coming up the slope, and I saw what looked like a piling. It was this big black column, and as we got closer I realized that it was actually a storm outfall. And it was so full of road grime and who knows what that it was just black. And it was just billowing and billowing and it was, it just doesn’t stop.

I of course went home and I started looking it up on the Internet. I’m like "what’s in stormwater?" And I’m like, "we don’t want that there."

KATIE CAMPBELL:Stormwater is a toxic cocktail of sediment, grease, tire wear, and any litter small enough to slip into storm drains. And that’s just what you can see. There’s much more we can’t see.

Microscopic particles of heavy metals like copper and zinc are commonly found in urban highway runoff. There’s also oil and petroleum-based hydrocarbons. Contrary to what a lot of people think, runoff is Puget Sound’s biggest source of pollution.

GILES PETTIFOR, King County Stormwater Permit Team: Approximately 50 percent of the region believe that stormwater is treated, is captured and then conveyed for treatment to a treatment plan of some type. When in fact this doesn’t take place, and almost all of this water goes off totally untreated.

KATIE CAMPBELL:Throughout the United States, so much land has been paved over that the total amount of impervious surfaces would cover an area the size of Ohio. Every time water washed over these hard surfaces, pollutants pour into the nearest waterway.

JENNIFER MCINTYRE, Washington State University: All these impervious surfaces means that water can’t get through them, whereas if it rains in the forest, the water hits the ground and then very slowly seeps into the soil, and the soil acts like a sponge. It slows down the water, it cleans the water out, it filters it. And obviously an impervious surface like pavement just doesn’t do that at all.

KATIE CAMPBELL: Jennifer McIntyre is leading a team that’s studying how polluted runoff impacts aquatic animals. The team recently collected runoff form a highway in Seattle and trucked it down to the Washington Stormwater Center.

It’s one of the only facilities in the world that’s conducting cutting edge research on what’s known as green stormwater infrastructure.

GILES PETTIFOR:Green stormwater infrastructure is building stormwater control structures that more closely mimic natural settings – things like rain gardens, bio-soils, green roofs, these are developing facilities or things that help improve water quality that are trying to mimic those natural filtration, you know, aspects of water infiltrating into the ground, or flowing through vegetation.

KATIE CAMPBELL:Around the northwest and across the country, new rules are being written that would require cities and counties to adopt green stormwater methods. But this prospect is causing some concern. Because green stormwater methods, such as rain gardens, are relatively new, little is known about them, or even whether they’d make any difference.

JENNIFER MCINTYRE:People are running out there and just building rain gardens, and that’s great, but there’s the potential for them not to work because we don’t know very much about them yet. So some of the things we’re hoping to learn here at this facility are: what are the best soil mixtures to use, what are the best plants to use, how long will these systems hold up to a continuous input of contaminants coming from stormwater runoff.

We know that they reduce some of the contaminants in stormwater. We know that the flows can be reduced. These are all really good things. But is that enough? Is that enough to protect wild fish and their food web from some of the harmful effects of stormwater runoff.

KATIE CAMPBELL:That’s what MacIntyre is trying to find out.

Once all the stormwater was mixed and samples were taken, the team filtered half the water through soil columns that mimic what happens in a rain garden. They then filled this series of aquariums – half with the straight highway runoff and half with runoff that had gone through rain garden filtration.

JENNIFER MCINTYRE:And each aquarium got 10 juvenile Coho salmon and then pretty much we waited to see what would happen.

KATIE CAMPBELL:Her plan was to monitor the salmon for four days, but within 12 hours all the fish that were in the straight highway runoff were dead. And the fish in the filtered runoff? All still alive.

JENNIFER MCINTYRE:I think it’s really telling that we can take something as concentrated and toxic as highway runoff and pass it through soil columns and have it no longer be acutely lethal to fish.

KATIE CAMPBELL:While Jennifer McIntyre searches for answers in the lab, Laura James is trying to raise awareness in the real world by documenting the effects of stormwater with her camera.

LAURA JAMES:If I can capture this on film, if I can share this, it will truly give our waters a voice. Because people see it, and they’re they’re just – it’s like shock. They stop what they’re doing and they actually look. It’s like a connection.

I see Puget Sound and our oceans as a reflection of us. They’re a reflection of our humanity and these stormdrains are like a conduit of our humanity running in there.

JUDY WOODRUFF:The Environmental Protection Agency at the federal level is in the process of strengthening national storm water regulations.

重點單詞   查看全部解釋    
impervious [im'pə:viəs]

想一想再看

adj. 不能滲透的,不為所動的

聯想記憶
capture ['kæptʃə]

想一想再看

vt. 捕獲,俘獲,奪取,占領,迷住,(用照片等)留存<

聯想記憶
slip [slip]

想一想再看

v. 滑倒,溜走,疏忽,滑脫
n. 滑倒,溜走

 
gem [dʒem]

想一想再看

n. 寶石,珍品,受到寵愛或評價很高的人,松糕

 
fantastic [fæn'tæstik]

想一想再看

adj. 極好的,難以置信的,奇異的,幻想的

 
column ['kɔləm]

想一想再看

n. 柱,圓柱,柱形物,專欄,欄,列

 
salmon ['sæmən]

想一想再看

n. 鮭,大馬哈魚,橙紅色的

聯想記憶
approximately [ə'prɔksimitli]

想一想再看

adv. 近似地,大約

 
sediment ['sedimənt]

想一想再看

n. 沉淀物

聯想記憶
mimic ['mimik]

想一想再看

adj. 模仿的,假的 [計算機] 模擬的 vt. 模仿

 
?
發布評論我來說2句

    最新文章

    可可英語官方微信(微信號:ikekenet)

    每天向大家推送短小精悍的英語學習資料.

    添加方式1.掃描上方可可官方微信二維碼。
    添加方式2.搜索微信號ikekenet添加即可。
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 南男北女| 柳堡的故事演员表| 搜狐搜狐| 致命录像带2| 我和我的父辈 电影| 我和我的祖国教案| 黄视频免费观看网站| 李彦萱| 烽火流金电视剧全集免费观看| 太太的情人 电影| 《在一起》电影免费观看| 唐安琪现在怎么样了| 手机在线观看电影网| 爱欲1990未删减版播放| 珍珠传奇 电视剧| 慈禧向十一国宣战台词| 性感美女动漫| 龙的新娘电视剧全集| 红电视剧演员表| 别说我的眼泪你无所谓吉他谱| 贝利亚抱住奥特之母完整版| 色老女人| 包头电视台| 青楼春凳打板子作文| 红海行动2| 定坤| 一元二次方程实际问题| 嫂子颂歌曲原唱| 护士的夏天| 白雪公主在线| 少女模特 电影| douyin| 延边卫视节目表| 花飞满城春 电影| 亚洲1区| 周星驰的全部电影免费观看| 爱的掌门人| 艳女tv在线播放| 电视剧火流星演员表| dj视频mv| 追踪 电影|