Be Careful Of What You Eat

kat2220

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EPA: U.S. Waterways Contain Polluted Fish

Updated 5:12 PM ET August 24, 2004


By JOHN HEILPRIN

WASHINGTON (AP) - One of every three lakes in the United States, and nearly one-quarter of the nation's rivers contain enough pollution that people should limit or avoid eating fish caught there.

Every state but Alaska and Wyoming issued fish advisories covering some and occasionally all of their lakes or rivers in 2003, according to a national databased maintained by the Environmental Protection Agency and updated every year.

Though the number of advisories rose to 3,094, up from 2,814 in 2002, according to figures released Tuesday, EPA Administrator Mike Leavitt said the increase was due to more monitoring, not more pollution.

Nearly all the advisories involve contaminants such as mercury, dioxins, PCBs, pesticides and heavy metals, including arsenic, copper and lead. Currently they cover 35 percent of the nation's lake acreage and 24 percent of river miles.

Leavitt said mercury pollution from industry is decreasing, though he cited figures only as recent as five years ago. Primary sources of mercury pollution include coal-burning power plants, the burning of hazardous and medical waste and production of chlorine. It also occurs naturally in the environment.



The advisories cover fish caught during recreational and sport fishing, not deep-sea commercial fishing or fish farming operations.

"It's about trout, not tuna. It's about what you catch on the shore, not what you buy on the shelf," Leavitt said. "This is about the health of pregnant mothers and small children, that's the primary focus of our concern."

But he also acknowledged that virtually every acre of lakes and mile of rivers could eventually be covered by advisories.

Since pollution is found in fish nearly every time a state looks for it, the EPA assumes that whenever a state does that kind of monitoring it will wind up issuing a fish advisory, he said.

"I want to make clear that this agency views mercury as a toxin. Manmade emissions need to be reduced and regulated. There has been an appropriate, heightened public concern," Leavitt said.

This year, 44 states had a fish advisory for mercury, a persistent substance that affects the nervous system. Two more states, Montana and Washington, added statewide advisories to warn of the potential for widespread contamination of fish.

Servings of fish caught by family or friends and not covered by an advisory should be limited to one six-ounce portion a week, according to the Food and Drug Administration.

The latest figures troubled frequent critics of the Bush administration, including environmentalist groups such as the Sierra Club, the National Wildlife Federation and Natural Resources Defense Council. They want stricter limits imposed on mercury pollution from coal-fired power plants.

Earlier this month an environmental advocacy coalition released a report citing EPA figures to claim that 76 percent of fish samples collected from 260 bodies of water exceeded the agency's mercury exposure limits for children under 3.

"Sadly, America's women and children are paying for the administration's procrastination," said Carl Pope, executive director of the Sierra Club, which noted that state advisories now cover 13 million acres of lakes and three-quarter million miles of rivers.

"This listing clearly indicates that we are moving in the wrong direction on mercury pollution," said Sen. Jim Jeffords, I-Vt., a senior member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.

Jeffords and President Bush have each proposed ways of regulating mercury and other pollution from coal-fired power plants. Jeffords would have the government force industry to reduce mercury emissions by 90 percent by 2008; Bush wants to cut mercury emissions by 70 percent by 2018.

The EPA, after being sued by NRDC, plans to issue by mid-March the nation's first regulations for the 48 tons of mercury a year from power plants.

___

On the Net:

EPA: http://www.epa.gov/waterscience/fish

Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
Oh no polluted fishies. What Gollum gonna do now. Gollum like fishies. Hafta get Kat to catch more rabbits. :lol:
 
Kat will catch more rabbits for Gullum :wub: But Kat can catch Deer TOO!
 

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These are the same tree-huggers who got the dolpins out of my tuna, I'd bet ya. :angry:

Well as long as there are fish to catch, I will eat them gladly. Nothing like a nice big plate of fresh caught Walleye. :wub:
 
Originally posted by 4xchampncountin@Aug 25 2004, 10:29 PM
Nothing like a nice big plate of fresh caught Walleye. :wub:
A man of wisdom, taste and distinction. Walleye rocks.

I actually saw some guys fishing one day literally in the shadows of the reactors in Oak Ridge. I ain't never been that hungry. :eek:
 
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