$ rain (Continued from Page C 32) I | fishermen are now fishless, f apparently because of much 1 greater than normal acidity The dead lakes are at high ? elevations, where soil lacks s buffering agents that ; neutralize acid as it pours • into the streams. | Scientists there think the fish probably died out I because, in the acid-laden I water, they lost capacity to I reproduce. Some have been I killed more directly, in f sudden surges of acid J resulting from quick snow t thaws. The sterile lakes don’t appear murky or polluted Instead, they are blue and clear, the “ideal of a pristine lake,” observed Thomas J |l New & Used Silos f New & Used Extensions N Tear down & Rebuild | Replastering, roofs, | permanent pipe & i distributors | Jamesway Unloaders | Barn Equipment | Write or Call DETWEILER SILOS J Rd 2 Box 267-D » Newvilie, PA 17241 I, Phone: ¥ 717-532-3039 H 717-776-7533 I 717-776-3288 l2th & Spring sis QQQC mwk entals Reading, PA 19604 0 * D’OOuO Butler of Cornell University, who is studying acid precipitation’s effects on aquatic life. “I’ve been diving in some of these lakes and there’s nothing left except a few water bugs,” he said. “People who used to fish there in the 50’s just don’t go there anymore.” The high acidity already has taken an economic toll. The Adirondack Park Agency estimates the decline of game fish has meant an annual loss of at least $1 million in recreational revenue. Exactly what acid precipitation does to plants and crops is not as clear, but preliminary data show reduced seed germination, damage to seedlings, in terference with photosyn- ;L o , GOOD EQUIPMENT AT LOW, REASONABLE RATES fi^ENTALS thesis, lowered resistance to disease, and lesions on leaves And there is direct evidence that a f, in precipitation leaches minerals from soil and can even release soil’s metals, sometimes sending them into streams or water •supplies Some of the world’s most majestic man-made structures the Parthenon, the Colosseum, Taj Mahal also are feeling acid precipitation’s effects. The progressive disfiguring of the sculptures on the Acropolis, for example, has been the work of acid rain “We can even see streaking on the Washington Monument possibly the result of acid rain’s grooving and pitting effects,” Hood said. “Rock that might last hundreds of years is lasting only decades.” Wood, metal, and other minerals are not immune either. In this country acid precipitation first was detected in the Northeast, but it appears to have spread south and west in the last 20 years despite the prevailing west-to-east winds. All states east of the Mississippi now are regularly stung by ab normally acidic rain or snow, and acid precipitation has found its way to urban areas of the West such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle. What perplexes scientists is how acid precipitation moves. Often shoved high into the atmosphere by tall smokestacks, the pollutants can be picked up and carried for weeks and miles before being dropped in rain or snow The spring shower that drenches New England might be loaded with pollution from an Ohio Valley power plant Some of our pollutants even wind up in storms over Canada, and the amount is expected to increase under a plan to convert dozens of When You Need CONSTRUCTION H EQUIPMENT.. \0 ' r>=r . 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In Scandinavia, where acid rain first was detected, the industrial areas of Britain and northern Europe are blamed And some ex perts think an acidic haze over the Arctic was made in Japan. “Not being able to tell whose pollution is whose makes it difficult to do something about the problem,” Hood pointed out Because its sources are so hard to pin down, acid precipitation passes over most of the country’s clean air regulations Bruce Jordan of the Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Air Quality, Planning and Standards, says the EPA probably will recommend to Congress that the clean air act be amended to address acid precipitation One way to dry up acid rain sources is to cleanse coal of some of its chemicals before it is ever burned, Jordan said. Another possible remedy for fac tories and plants is the scrubber, which removes the byproducts of combustion before they are released into the atmosphere. But some people are not convinced that acid precipitation is really hurting anything. “We recognize the potential for harm, but we’re not convinced that acid rain actually is doing damage in the real world,” said Ralph Perhac, acting director of the Electric Power Research Institute, an organization set up to do research for power companies “We also know that coal fired plants contribute to acid rain, but do they con tribute 5 percent or 100 9 ” The institute is funding studies of acid precipitation in the Adirondacks as well as in Britain Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 29,1980—€ Most scientists agree that the effects of acid precipitation are still in question, but they’d rather not wait around for a more precise picture to be drawn Soybean group to study grain transportation ST. LOUIS, Mo. - The American Soybean Association has appointed a four-member task force to study and recommend ac tions to modernize and improve the U.S tran sportation system. “The transportation system is vital to our efforts to expand soybean and gram exports in competition with other producing countries,” says ASA President Allan Aves “U.S farmers are dependent upon the tran sportation system. As the nation’s leading export crop, soybeans must be able to move efficiently and freely to our ports. At the direction of the ASA voting delegates and Board of Directors, I have appointed this task force to develop recom mendations which our farmer-delegates will consider in New Orleans in August ” ASA Board Chairman Merlyn Groot of Manson, lowa, will chair the task force. Other members in clude. James M. Ferguson, Fertilizer cutback may be profitable UNIVERSITY PARK - For the first tune in many years fanners need to take a serious look at the amount of fertilizer they are applying to their crops, says Frederick A. Hughes, exten sion farm management specialist, at Penn State. Fertilizer prices for many years did not change Farmers were able to fer tilize for maximum yield and not worry about the most economic level of fertiliza tion. With fertilizer prices tripl ing m the last several years, farmers need to consider whether that last increment of fertilizer is returning enough production to pay for LIQUID MANURE HANDLING EQUIPMENT -► BY BETTER-BILT USED SPREADER 1000 gal. Better Bilt Vac. • PLANNING LAYOUTS • SALES • INSTALLAION • SERVICE SHENK’S FARM SERVICE 501 E. WOODS DRIVE LITITZ, PA 17543 PHONE: 717-626-1151 Home Phone Paul Repine 717 626 2837 Mervin Nisstey 717 872-4565 Our Service Trucks Are Radio Dispatched 24 Hr Service Offered As a plant physiologist studying the phenomenon said “By the tune we determine the full effects of acid rain, it will be too late to reverse them ” Calhoun City, Mississippi, vice president of the Mississippi Soybean Association; Roger Asen dorf, St. James, Minnesota, president of the Minnesota Soybean Growers Association; and Andrew Winslow, Hertford, North Carolina, a member of the North Carolina Soybean Producers Association. “In order to avoid rein venting the wheel, we plan to meet with other groups who are currently studying the transportation problems,” Groot said “We will study all three major transportation systems: rail, barge and truck. We hope to develop recommendations that will consider cost efficiency and utility of the systems, as well as ways in which the three modes can work together. ” Groot said the ASA committee will be working closely with transportation committees already at work for the lowa Soybean Association and the Min nesota Soybean Growers Association the cost of the fertilizer. On many crops such as com, that require a sizable amount of nitrogen for max lumum production, it would be well for a farmer to try to determine what response he gest from incremental ap plications of nitrogen fer tilizer It is questionable whether the last 10 to 30 pounds of nitrogen will be profitable in trying to obtain an extra 10 or 15 bushels of com. In many cases, that extra 10 to 30 pounds of nitrogen will only yield one or two bushels of com and this will hardly pay for the price of the additional nitrogen, Hughes points out. 121