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Natural Buffers Took Beating (Katrina eco disaster,toxicity spreads miles)

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DeepModem Mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-21-05 10:15 AM
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Natural Buffers Took Beating (Katrina eco disaster,toxicity spreads miles)
WP: Natural Buffers Took a Beating
Gulf's Woods and Wetlands Experienced Lasting Damage

By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 21, 2005; Page A10


Until a couple of weeks ago, Mississippi's Clower-Thornton Nature Trail lured avid birders as well as small children, who wandered in fascination underneath its broad canopy of oak and dogwood trees. Now the trail's entrance sign warns: "Do Not Enter, Toxic," and the surrounding habitat is dying....

***

The scene of devastation in Gulfport, Miss., is just one of the ecological disasters to emerge as scientists, activists and state and federal officials have begun documenting how the hurricane damaged one of the nation's largest networks of estuaries, wetlands and cypress swamps -- a varied and watery ecosystem that sustains a wealth of birds, fish and vegetation. From polluted fisheries to battered forests, the Gulf Coast's habitat has suffered losses that will take years to restore, they say....

***

Federal authorities have devoted much of their attention so far to the contaminated water in New Orleans, where floodwaters are said to be laced with industrial toxins and untreated sewage. The city's flooded area includes 121 known contaminated sites and more than 1,000 that are possibly contaminated, according to Environmental Data Resources Inc., a firm that compiles environmental information on private and public property.

The polluted water is being pumped out into neighboring Lake Pontchartrain and the Gulf of Mexico, and is likely to affect areas far beyond the city's confines. Federal scientists are already investigating whether the contaminants have damaged valuable fisheries in the gulf, and some scientists and local activists are worried that Lake Pontchartrain is being sacrificed.

Yesterday, environmental activists released satellite images showing large oil slicks a few miles offshore, in the Gulf of Mexico, some stemming from known oil platform locations and stretching as far as 40 miles. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Stephen L. Johnson said the agency has documented five oil spills in the New Orleans area....


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/20/AR2005092001706.html
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Sabriel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-21-05 10:18 AM
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1. Looks like the Gulf shrimp in my freezer will be the last
I really feel for all those hand-to-mouth fishery people. This will kill them.
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madfloridian Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-21-05 10:36 AM
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2. Pollution from the dumping into the Gulf goes to the Keys.
One of our local stations showed an aerial view. The Gulf is dying now, helped on by the toxic phosphate wastes from Piney Point in Pinellas County and now this....it is dying.

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WhiteTara Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-21-05 10:54 AM
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3. the gulf was already in so much eco trouble
before, but now, except by some miracle, it is dead and it will pollute the ocean even more. The coral reefs which are so precious don't have a chance in that area. I watch these pictures on tv of that nasty water rushing into the lake and river and it looks like we are a bunch of dogs, shitting next to our food.
RIP dear Mother Earth...I wonder how many people will realize that means we are all dying too.

Our lives are shorter than flowers
then should we mourn?
No, we shall dance
plant gardens
dress in colors
and teach our children
to make the world more beautiful
because our lives are shorter than flowers
-Toltec fragment-

Too bad there are so many who don't subscribe to that.
See you in DC to march for our lives.
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