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Sure It's Not the Politics?

Wildlife waste blamed for pollution in D.C.-area waterways

Tired of being left out, nature has decided to join in the fun and pollute itself. A significant amount of harmful bacteria in Virginia and Maryland waterways has been pinned on, well, wildlife poop. The Potomac and Anacostia rivers and an additional two dozen or so streams have been declared federally "impaired waters": not ideal for swimming and in need of cleanup. In both rivers, more than half of the bacteria came from the dung of geese, deer, muskrats, raccoons, and other wild animals (humans' poo contributed nearly a quarter of the Anacostia's bacteria, and 16 percent of the Potomac's). "You need to go back and say, 'Maybe the standards aren't exactly right' if wildlife are causing the problem," said Thomas Henry of the U.S. EPA. But enviros don't want to let human-caused pollution sources off the hook. "Just ignore the wildlife and deal with the leaking sewer pipes," said Robert Boone of the Anacostia Watershed Society. And maybe they could build wildlife-designated public restrooms?

straight to the source: The Washington Post, David A. Fahrenthold, 29 Sep 2006


Comments: (2 comments)

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love them lobos!

Said the post:
<<
Importantly to the area's ranchers, the rise in wolf population has not corresponded with a rise in the number of livestock killed or injured.
>>

Of course not.  Wolves were never responsible for more than a minuscule percentage of lost livestock.

Anyone who continues to mistrust wolves are alpha lycophobes.  Definitely not an admirable breed.

One thing we need is a bunch of learned wildlife folk, who know wolves well, but also have good people skills, to talk to owners of livestock, from the northern Rockies, across Idaho to Oregon, to assure them that the wolves are not going to be a problem.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

Odd

There was no mention of dog and cat waste. I have a friend who has a large dog and his backyard looks and smells like an open sewer. The pollution here in Seattle's streams is most likely from dogs and cats, did they miss something in the other Wahsington?

In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Poison Darts--Protecting the biodiversity of our world

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