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Ill Winds.


Dust storms ferry toxic agents between countries and even continents

Second in a two-part series on the effects of the long-range movement of dust.

Last spring, Zev Levin flew to northern China. The atmospheric physicist from Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv University (TAU, אוניברסיטת תל־אביב, את"א) is Israel's largest on-site university.  in Israel had been invited to give a series of guest lectures on cloud physics and to meet with meteorological researchers to discuss cloud seeding.

On April 7 at 7 a.m., he awoke in his Baichang hotel expecting sunny skies. Instead, it appeared "pitch black," he recalls. Levin couldn't even make out cars on the street below.

Then, he detected a yellowish cast. It suggested to Levin that the pall over Baichang must be dust: enormous amounts kicked up from a spring storm in the Gobi Desert some 1,000 kilometers to the west. When the skies brightened somewhat, 45 minutes later, Levin had enough light to finally snap a photo of the scene out his hotel window.

"I was in the right place at the right time," he says.

The mammoth curtain of dust that darkened Baichang indeed came from the Gobi. Two days after passing through northern China, the plume of sand and dirt moved out over the Pacific. By the time it streamed through the skies over Boulder, Colo., on April 13, it still carried enough dust to reduce sunlight by an estimated 25 percent, according to a report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and  (NOAA NOAA
abbr.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Noun 1. NOAA - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment;
). The plume eventually crossed into the North Atlantic. All along its west-to-east path, it left a thin layer of foreign soil.

Three months later, a cloud of red, iron-rich dust from Saharan Africa was heading from east to west. In Barbados, this plume marked its passage by depositing a thin veneer of red soil on auto windshields, kitchen counters, even bed sheets. The dust cloud then moved into the eastern United States.

Each year, several hundred million tons of African soil cross the Atlantic to the Americas, notes Joseph M. Prospero of the University of Miami This article is about the university in Coral Gables, Florida. For the university in Oxford, Ohio, see Miami University.

The University of Miami (also known as Miami of Florida,[2] UM,[3] or just The U
. The Middle East and Europe get their share of African dust, as well. And untold tons of Asian dust cross the Pacific. Even the southwestern United States generates some plumes that scientists have tracked as far as Canada.

Though most people view the episodic fallout of such far-flung dust as merely a nuisance, research is beginning to suggest that the long-range movement of dust may be unhealthy for wildlife, crops, and even people.

By studying African dust particles' size, trajectory, and mineral composition, Prospero has begun calculating its contribution to Western air pollution. In Miami, for instance, passing African dust sometimes constitutes half of the breathable breath·a·ble  
adj.
1. Suitable or pleasant for breathing: breathable air.

2. Permitting air to pass through: a breathable fabric.
 particulates in summer air--as much as 100 micrograms per cubic meter [micro]g/[m.sup.3])--jeopardizing the city's compliance with federal Clean Air Act limits.

As important as drifting soil particles might be to air-pollution standards, some hitchhikers in those dust clouds may be even more dangerous. Studies are now turning up viruses, bacteria, fungi, and toxic metals in intercontinental dust. Nobody has yet looked for hormone-mimicking chemicals and other such biologically active pollutants, but Ginger H. Garrison of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS USGS United States Geological Survey (US Department of the Interior) ) in St. Petersburg, Fla., has reason to suspect that they're blowing around as well.

Data emerging from her group and others', she says, warn that dirt lofted from continent to continent could contribute to agricultural losses and human disease.

Though scientists have known that intercontinental dust plumes can ferry bacteria and viruses, "most people had assumed that the [sun's] ultraviolet light would sterilize sterilize /ster·i·lize/ (ster´i-liz)
1. to render sterile; to free from microorganisms.

2. to render incapable of reproduction.


ster·il·ize
v.
1.
 these clouds," says microbiologist Dale W. Griffin, also with the USGS in St. Petersburg. "We now find that isn't true."

The first solid evidence emerged almost 4 years ago, following a chance meeting between Garrison and Garriet W. Smith, a coral researcher at the University of South Carolina
''This article is about the University of South Carolina in Columbia. You may be looking for a University of South Carolina satellite campus.


    
 in Aiken.

Previously, Smith had linked a terrestrial fungus, Aspergillus Aspergillus

Any fungus of the genus Aspergillus of the Fungi Imperfecti (form-class Deuteromycetes). Species for which the sexual phase is known are placed in the order Eurotiales. A. niger causes black mold on some foods; A. niger, A. flavus, and A.
 sedowii, to a devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 Caribbean sea fan epidemic. He then proposed that rain-eroded soil might be washing the fungus into waters where this coral was dying (SN: 1/30/99, p. 72).

Garrison suggested that Smith also consider airborne dust as a source of fungi, and she volunteered to send him some African dust samples that she had collected in St. John, the U.S. Virgin Islands. "He laughed," she recalls, "and said, `Sure.'"

"We were all astounded a·stound  
tr.v. a·stound·ed, a·stound·ing, a·stounds
To astonish and bewilder. See Synonyms at surprise.



[From Middle English astoned, past participle of astonen,
," Garrison says, "when he found [Aspergillus] in the very first sample." Working with Smith, Julianna Weir used DNA tests to confirm the presence of A. sedowii in a host of additional samples. She found that the fungus collected from the dust would cause disease in sea fans. Weir notes that not all strains of that fungus will sicken those corals.

Prodded by such findings, Garrison, Griffin, and their colleagues launched an extensive analysis of other microbes in St. John's air. They compared air sampled while an African dust plume was over the island--as indicated by satellite images--with air collected on clear days. Although the researchers found some microbes in all of the samples, those from dusty days contained nearly 9 times as many bacteria and at least 10 times as many viruses as did those from nonplume days.

What's more, 20 times as many of the microbes collected on dusty days were viable--able to grow in the lab--compared with those collected at other times.

Although the scientists couldn't identify all the microorganisms that seemed to have arrived with African dust, most of the ones they did recognize turned out to be, like Aspergillus, associated with terrestrial plants. This all but ruled out winds having picked up the microbes midocean.

In fact, Griffin's team reported in the June 14 AEROBIOLOGIA that a large share of the identified bacteria and fungi is made up of apparent pathogens--mostly plant pathogens.

Why hadn't solar ultraviolet light killed the germs during their weeklong flight over the Atlantic? Griffin now suspects that big storms carry so much dust in their upper layers that these particles shield the microbes traveling below. Furthermore, some bacteria or viruses may hide within crevices on the airborne particles of soil and sand.

In a just-published issue of GLOBAL CHANGE AND HUMAN HEALTH, Griffin and his colleagues note that the suspected link between the Caribbean sea fan disease and African dust may be just the tip of an iceberg. The USGS scientists have reviewed many past reports of new epidemics--usually affecting crops--that seemingly struck out of nowhere.

Among these was the 1978 emergence of sugarcane rust in the Americas. First reported in the Dominican Republic, the fungus disease spread explosively to other islands, devastating the Caribbean sugar industry.

Puccinia melanocephala, the fungus responsible, was previously endemic only in Asia and Africa. In a 1985 paper, Sagar Sagar (sä`gər), city (1991 pop. 257,119), Madhya Pradesh state, central India. Sagar is a regional market for wheat, cotton, and oilseed. Such industries as sawmilling, oil, and flour milling are important.  V. Krupa of the University of Minnesota (body, education) University of Minnesota - The home of Gopher.

http://umn.edu/.

Address: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
 at St. Paul and his colleagues concluded that the Caribbean epidemic probably traced to "transoceanic transport" of spores from Cameroon in West Africa.

Krupa's group acknowledged at the time that although "there are few if any well-documented cases" of viable fungi blowing across the ocean, this seemed the best explanation. The Dominican Republic had received no cane-harvesting crews or equipment, much less sugar cane, that might have carried rust fungus from Africa or Asia, the plant pathologists reported. Moreover, the researchers found that records of prevailing winds for 1978 and 1979 coincided precisely with the arrival and spread of the disease from Cameroon--and its subsequent apparent leap from the Caribbean to Australia.

The recent AEROBIOLOGIA paper from Griffin's group lends credence to other links between winds and agricultural epidemics. One such association was suggested 5 years ago by the late Merritt Nelson of the University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service.  in Phoenix. He proposed that the 1995 U.S. emergence of Karnal bunt--a smut fungus that devastates wheat--was triggered by the burning of infected fields in Mexico. The updraft up·draft  
n.
An upward current of air.



updraft  

An upward current of warm, moist air. With enough moisture, the current may visibly condense into a cumulus or cumulonimbus cloud. Compare downdraft.
 from the flames lofted smut smut, name for an order of parasitic fungi (Ustilaginales) and the various diseases of plants caused by them. Smuts produce sootlike masses of spores on the host.  spores high into the air, permitting them to travel in winds for hundreds of miles, Nelson proposed.

Then there was the explosive spread of Asian anthracnose anthracnose

Plant disease of warm humid areas, caused by a fungus (usually Colletotrichum or Gloeosporium). It infects various plants, from trees to grasses. Symptoms include sunken spots of various colours in leaves, stems, fruits, or flowers, often leading to wilting and
, a spotting and wilting disease, in Canadian lentil lentil, leguminous Old World annual plant (Lens culinaris) with whitish or pale blue flowers. Its pods contain two greenish-brown or dark-colored seeds, also called lentils, which when fully ripe are ground into meal or used in soups and stews.  fields in 1987. The disease typically spreads via shipments of infected seed, but Canadian farmers had planted their lentil fields with seed that was certified clean. Puzzling over the spread, Claude C. Bernier of the University of Manitoba Location
The main Fort Garry campus is a complex on the Red River in south Winnipeg. It has an area of 2.74 square kilometres. More than 60 major buildings support the teaching and research programs of the university.
 in Winnipeg and his colleagues decided to inspect dust kicked up during lentil harvesting.

In the November 1996 PHYTOPATHOLOGY phytopathology /phy·to·pa·thol·o·gy/ (-pah-thol´ah-je) the pathology of plants. , they reported that combines indeed spew dust infected with Asian anthracnose at least 250 meters. "We didn't have facilities to measure distances beyond that," Bernier now observes. However, he says, the spores should be able to go hundreds of kilometers or more in western Canada's strong winds.

There's even a 19-year-old VETERINARY RECORD report by British livestock and meteorological researchers on the possible long-distance aerial spread of foot-and-mouth disease. After reviewing 23 outbreaks between the 1950s and 1980s, they concluded that there's strong circumstantial evidence that the virus responsible had at least occasionally leapfrogged within Europe by aerosol transport over "a long sea passage," such as the English Channel.

Evidence of toxic effects on people from long-traveling dust is also emerging. Raana Naidu of Queen Elizabeth Hospital Queen Elizabeth Hospital can refer to one of several hospitals named after either Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom or Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother:

Australia
  • Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Adelaide
Barbados
  • Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Bridgetown
 in Barbados and his colleagues, for instance, find seasonal correlations between the arrival of African dust and a rise in hospital visits for asthma.

Decades ago, Prospero set up a dust-sampling station on Barbados. The most easterly island in the Caribbean, it's often the first landing site in the Western Hemisphere for African dust. Three years ago, Naidu's team began analyzing dust from the station.

The researchers now report preliminary data indicating, as Griffin's team had, that there are greater numbers of viable bacteria and fungi in the air when African-dust plumes pass through. With such allergy-triggering components, the foreign dust may explain some of Barbados' escalating asthma incidence, Naidu says.

Although most emergency room visits for asthma on Barbados occur during the rainy season, when fungal growth blossoms, a small peak also appears during the May-June dry season. New data by Naidu's team show that this spike coincides with times of African-dust fallout containing viable spores of Bacillus bacillus (bəsĭl`əs), any rod-shaped bacterium or, more particularly, a rod-shaped bacterium of the genus Bacillus. Some bacterium in the genus cause disease, for example B.  bacteria. Dust with similar concentrations of microbes, but largely free of Bacillus, triggers no increase in the disease.

Naidu told SCIENCE NEWS, "We see more of [an asthma] correlation with the content of this dust--the specific organisms in it--than with just the quantity of dust."

A link between dust and respiratory ills has also turned up downwind of the Aral Sea in central Asia.

Only 40 years ago, notes Phillip Micklin of Western Michigan University Western Michigan University, at Kalamazoo, Mich.; coeducational; founded in 1903 as Western State Normal School, became accredited in 1927 as a college, gained university status in 1957.  in Kalamazoo, this body of water straddling the current Kazakhstan and Karakalpakstan border was the world's fourth-largest lake. Then, Soviet planners authorized huge diversions of water for farm irrigation irrigation, in agriculture, artificial watering of the land. Although used chiefly in regions with annual rainfall of less than 20 in. (51 cm), it is also used in wetter areas to grow certain crops, e.g., rice.  from the rivers feeding the lake. The Aral's ensuing shrinkage exposed some 3.5 million hectares of silty lakebed lake·bed  
n.
The floor of a lake.
 to the winds, says Micklin.

Moreover, he notes, another 8 million hectares of irrigated land around the Aral Sea is heavily laden with pesticides and highly vulnerable to erosion after plowing.

Indeed, because of a recent switch from cotton to wheat cultivation on that land, "they now plow up in June and July, the driest time," observes Sarah O'Hara of the University of Nottingham The University of Nottingham is a leading research and teaching university in the city of Nottingham, in the East Midlands of England. It is a member of the Russell Group, and of Universitas 21, an international network of research-led universities.  in England. A coincidental switch to heavier plows, which unearth more soil, further increased the amount of dirt subject to dust generation.

Today, she notes, soil from the Aral Sea region regularly rains out more than 1,000 km to the south and east at rates that "are among the highest in the world." For instance, her team reported in the Feb. 19, 2000 LANCET that sites roughly 400 km south of the region receive up to 1,600 kilograms of Aral Sea--area dust per hectare per month. With this dust come high concentrations of phosalone. This organophosphate pesticide can impair the cognitive abilities of people exposed to it, says O'Hara.

Together with physicians from the Brussels, Belgium--based organization Doctors Without Borders Doctors Without Borders, Fr. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), international organization that provides emergency medical assistance to people suffering from a natural or societal disaster, such as an earthquake or war. , O'Hara's group is now studying the health of 1,600 children living downwind of the Aral Sea. Although the researchers haven't seen an excessive incidence of asthma in the group, many of the children exhibit diminished lung function.

Oddly, those with the worst impairments aren't the children who live closest to the dust source. Conceding that this "is completely the reverse of what you would ordinarily expect," O'Hara surmises that the closer children are exposed primarily to coarse dust--particles too big to be deeply inhaled. Heavy dust during storms may also prompt residents to stay indoors or to cover their noses and mouths.

People further from the source of the dust are more often exposed to nearly invisible, fine dust particles that they can unknowingly inhale deep into their lungs, O'Hara speculates.

"Owens Lake is our Aral Sea," says Dale Gillette, an atmospheric scientist with NOAA in Research Triangle Park Research Triangle Park, research, business, medical, and educational complex situated in central North Carolina. It has an area of 6,900 acres (2,795 hectares) and is 8 × 2 mi (13 × 3 km) in size. Named for the triangle formed by Duke Univ. , N.C. Once the size of the Sea of Galilee The Sea of Galilee or Lake Kinneret (Hebrew ים כנרת), is Israel's largest freshwater lake. It is approximately 53 km (33 miles) in circumference, about 21 km (13 miles) long, and 13 km (8 miles) wide; it has a total area of 166 , it sat in California midway between Sequoia National Park Sequoia National Park, 402,510 acres (162,960 hectares), E central Calif.; est. 1890. In the park are 35 groves of giant sequoias, spectacular granite mountains, and deep canyons.  and Death Valley. But around 1900, state bureaucrats decided that the river feeding Owens Lake was better used to slake the thirst of the growing population of Los Angeles.

Within about 10 years, the lake dried up. This uncovered 28,500 hectares of briny silt that's tainted with arsenic. Nineteenth-century gold miners had used the carcinogenic carcinogenic

having a capacity for carcinogenesis.
 metal in their operations upstream. Today, Gillette says, Owens Lake is the biggest single dust source in the United States."

Federal rules prohibit airborne concentrations of the smallest, most readily inhaled dust particles--those 10 micrometers in diameter or smaller--to exceed an average of 15 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] over any 24-hour period or 150 [micro]g/[m.sup.3] over any single hour. But 24-hour-average concentrations of arsenic-laced soil blowing from Owens Lake into the nearby town of Keeler are frequently 150 [micro]g/[m.sup.3].

During big storms, concentrations of the fine dust can skyrocket to 40,000 [micro]g/[m.sup.3], notes Ted Schade of the Great Basin Air Pollution Control District in Bishop, Calif. "It's indescribable," he says.

While the arsenic content in the dust isn't high enough to kill anyone quickly, it does increase lifetime cancer risk in exposed individuals to about 1 in 40,000.

In response to lawsuits over the problem, Gillette notes, the City of Los Angeles
For the city, see Los Angeles, California.
The City of Los Angeles was a streamlined passenger train jointly operated by the Chicago and North Western Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad.
 is now undertaking costly efforts to cover Owens Lake with drought-tolerant, soil-grabbing vegetation.

The presence of a carcinogen carcinogen: see cancer.
carcinogen

Agent that can cause cancer. Exposure to one or more carcinogens, including certain chemicals, radiation, and certain viruses, can initiate cancer under conditions not completely understood.
 in Owens Lake dust and toxic pesticides in plumes from the Aral Sea suggests that tiny particles may entrain entrain /en·train/ (en-tran´) to modulate the cardiac rhythm by gaining control of the rate of the pacemaker with an external stimulus.  more than just microbes. To date, however, few scientific studies have made even rudimentary attempts to scout for such hitchhikers, O'Hara and Garrison observe.

Both researchers, however, will begin such projects soon. Garrison's undertaking, the more comprehensive, is designed to analyze airborne dust in Africa and the Caribbean for minerals, such as mercury, arsenic, cadmium, lead, zinc, and copper; agricultural pesticides and herbicides; a few common antibiotics; combustion products; and plastics ingredients, such as hormone-mimicking phthalates Phthalates, or phthalate esters, are a group of chemical compounds that are mainly used as plasticizers (substances added to plastics to increase their flexibility). They are chiefly used to turn polyvinyl chloride from a hard plastic into a flexible plastic. .

Garrison says that she was prompted to examine dust particles for constituents beyond microbes by what she witnessed last December on a trip up the Niger River to Timbuktu, Mali. She saw people burning plastic bags, human and animal wastes, and anything else that would serve as fuel. She remembers thinking that it all was seeding the air with soot containing metals and other pollutants.

Further along on her trip, Garrison saw human and livestock wastes--presumably laced with drugs that had been ingested--being dumped untreated for use on crops. People were also spreading large amounts of chemicals on their fields.

After that tainted land is parched parch  
v. parched, parch·ing, parch·es

v.tr.
1. To make extremely dry, especially by exposure to heat: The midsummer sun parched the earth.
 by winter, Garrison knew, it would be vulnerable to harmattans--huge dry storms that yearly scour the land and fling soil high into the air. This dust could end up in the Caribbean.

The United States and other industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 nations routinely spew pollution that drifts over agrarian nations, says Garrison. Developing countries appear to be sending back soil tainted with chemicals and microbes that may be just as dangerous.

Garrison concludes, "It's a very small world."
COPYRIGHT 2001 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:millions of tons of African soil are blown around the world every year, with possible adverse health effects
Author:RALOFF, JANET
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:00WOR
Date:Oct 6, 2001
Words:2681
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