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July 17, 2023

Pollution timebombs: Contaminated wetlands are ticking toward ignition

Peat logs have long been used for warmth and cooking in communities across the globe. Credit: Colin McCarter, Author provided
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Peat logs have long been used for warmth and cooking in communities across the globe. Credit: Colin McCarter, Author provided

Wetlands across the globe have long served as natural repositories for humanity's toxic legacy, absorbing and retaining .

These swampy vaults have quietly been trapping air and for thousands of years, protecting the world from some of the worst effects of lead, mercury, copper, nickel and other poisonous materials.

Now, however, a combination of human disruptions and ever increasing wildfires threaten to open these vaults, unleashing their long dormant toxic contents upon the world.

Threats to releasing toxic legacies

The soil in many wetlands is composed of dead and decaying vegetation known as . Peat accumulates because perpetually sopping wetland conditions prevent the complete decomposition of dead vegetation. As these deposits accumulate, they form peatlands.

For centuries, peat has been drained, dried and extracted for heating fuel where wood is scarce. Though humans have long burned bricks of peat in their homes, climate change and wetland draining are drying entire wetlands, .

Centuries of fallout from such as smelting has deposited in wetlands hundreds or even thousands of kilometers away from their point of origin. Human and industrial wastewater has, in places, added to this burden.

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Wetlands have absorbed and stored these contaminants, holding them back from vulnerable aquatic ecosystems and saving humans from ingesting them.

Peat has a tremendous ability to capture and retain toxic metals by binding the metals to the peat itself through a process called adsorption. Once bound, the toxic metals are immobilized and pose little threat to the surrounding environment unless the peatland is disturbed, like from a wildfire.

Fire burns away the peat as the resulting smoke is carried on the breeze. Credit: Greg Verkaik, Author provided
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Fire burns away the peat as the resulting smoke is carried on the breeze. Credit: Greg Verkaik, Author provided

Wetlands and fire

Human activities such as road building and have seriously disrupted , , as Canadians saw in the catastrophic Fort McMurray, Alta., wildfire of 2016.

As climate change and human actions further degrade wetlands, the resulting wildfires threaten to return humanity's toxic legacy. This cycle carries frightening implications for the health of people and the environment.

In 2015, Indonesia recorded about . Meanwhile, Canada and the United States are far from immune from exposure to peat fire smoke. In early June 2023, cities as far away as Washington, D.C., and New York were blanketed in thick smoke from peat fires in northern Canada, which is home to many of the world's peatlands.

At the same time, is accelerating the drying of peatlands everywhere, turning their huge stores of carbon into a carbon burden. Furthermore, as concentrated pollutants build up in wetlands, the accumulation of toxic metals is killing plants that act as their natural lid, allowing moisture to escape and speeding the conversion of more wetlands to tinderboxes.

Once ignited, peatland fires are difficult to contain as they can smolder for weeks, months or even years. They produce copious amounts of smoke and ash, filling the air with microscopic particles.

Even without pollution, these airborne particles can cause severe illness and death. Making a bad situation worse, toxic metals once safely stored in wetlands bind to these airborne particles and spread everywhere.

Restoring wetlands

As with many global environmental issues, it is easy to feel helpless to control such a huge and complex problem. Fortunately, nature-based solutions can have a substantial positive impact on keeping this toxic legacy from being released.

We can restore drying or dried-out wetlands back to their original state as functional ecosystems through, at the most basic level, . Indeed, even without further intervention, re-wetting wetlands can reduce their risk of wildfire ignition. However, restoration must be managed carefully, to avoid flushing toxic metals from wetlands into neighboring streams, rivers and lakes.

To preserve wetland plants and return ecosystem functionality without releasing the stored toxic legacy, . , though new restoration techniques in contaminated wetlands need to be further developed and tested.

Although ecosystem restoration can be costly in terms of time and money, actively restoring appears to be our best chance to defuse the ticking time-bomb that our pollution vaults have become. . The cost of doing nothing will certainly be much greater.

Provided by The Conversation

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