Updated: 12:42 PM  EDT
 
 
Increased Mercury Levels Detected in  Mammoth Cave

 
MAMMOTH CAVE, Ky. (Aug. 7) - Scientists have observed  increased levels of 
mercury among bats in Mammoth Cave National Park, and they  blame the rise in 
part on pollution from coal-fired power plants.
Western Kentucky University and park experts, who conducted  the research 
aimed at measuring the amount of toxic metals in park wildlife,  said the 
endangered Indiana bat is among those with excess mercury levels. 
Mercury from power plants and other sources accumulates in  microscopic 
plants, which are eaten by tiny animals, which are eaten by insects,  which are 
consumed by bats. In each stage, the amount of mercury contained in  the body 
grows. 
Park officials said they believe mercury contamination  largely comes from 
emissions from coal-fired power plants, which utility  companies say they are 
reducing. The utilities pointed out that some mercury in  the atmosphere comes 
from natural sources, such as volcanoes and forest  fires. 
Bob Carson, the park's air resource specialist, and others  involved in the 
study said they have not determined whether the amount of  mercury in the bats 
is large enough to cause any central nervous system damage  or reduced 
reproduction. 
That would require a better understanding among scientists  of how much 
mercury bats can tolerate, officials said. But the researchers said  they found 
mercury in bats' hair at nearly 10 parts per million, which is above  the level 
beyond which detrimental effects have been detected in people and  rodents. 
"When I hear 10 parts per million, I would worry a bit,"  said David Evers, 
an expert on mercury and the environment who is the executive  director of the 
Biodiversity Research Institute in Gorham, Maine, who is  conducting bat 
studies in the Northeast that are similar to the work being done  at Mammoth 
Cave 
National Park. 
The study being done at the park involved teams using nets  to capture 
hundreds of bats over two summers, said Steve Thomas, a park  ecologist. 
Thomas estimated that about 6,000 to 8,000 bats inhabit the  park. 
Like people, the amount of mercury in bats' hair has been  shown to correlate 
with the amount of mercury in their bodies. 
Bats are especially vulnerable to the accumulation of  mercury "because their 
high metabolic rate requires they consume large amounts  of insects," said 
Kurt Helf, a park service ecologist who worked on the bat  study. 
Mercury could seriously affect bats' reproduction, said  Daniel Cristol, 
associate professor of biology at the College of William &  Mary in 
Williamsburg, 
Va. Cristol is studying how mercury affects wildlife along  the Shenandoah 
River. 
Environmentalists call Kentucky a "hot spot" for mercury  because of its many 
coal-fired power plants. And state officials have issued  mercury warnings 
about eating fish from waters in all 120 counties. 
Mercury pollution isn't the only thing worrying park  officials. The bat 
study arose from concerns several years ago that proposed  coal-fired power 
plants 
in the region could hurt the park's plants and animals,  including rare or 
endangered mussels, cave shrimp and bats. 
"We were wondering about the impact, but we had nothing to  go on," Carson 
said. 
08/07/05 12:26 EDT

Reply via email to