2007年VOA标准英语-Chesapeake Bay Faces Environmental Degradation(在线收听) |
By Zulima Palacio
Decades of human development have had a harsh effect on the watershed, filling it with an overabundance of agricultural nutrients – nitrogen and phosphorous – and industrial waste. Benjamin Grunbles of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency agrees. "We think the primary challenge, the biggest challenge for the Chesapeake Bay, is nutrients. Nutrients are a good thing but when they are in excessive amounts they can trigger algae growth, algae blooms which then deprive the water of oxygen as it decomposes." The U.S. Navy Yard, located in Washington D.C., dates to 1799. It once was an industrial facility to build ships, torpedoes and munitions. Over a period of 150 years the Navy discharged toxic materials into the bottom of the Anacostia River, one of many tributaries to the Chesapeake Bay. The Chesapeake Bay has long been known for its high production of oysters, crab and fish, and they support a multi-million fishing industry. But environmental groups say that pollution and years of over fishing are taking a toll. Anxious watermen consider themselves lucky to pull in a full catch. "In a good year it's a body of water that produces half of the blue crab in the U.S.,” Matuszeski tells us. “It is 90 percent of the spawning area for the striped bass, a very important fish population." Recent federal and private studies estimate that cleaning up the Chesapeake Bay will cost $28 billion, but plans to complete the restoration by 2010 are not likely to be met. Still, Benjamin Grunble of the Environmental Protection Agency expresses optimism for the bay's future, even as he warns of the degrading effects of the region's fast growing population. "The bay is definitely on the right track and we are making progress. But the reason we are not comfortable with the pace of progress so far is the reality that every year 150,000 new residents move into that large watershed. That means more development, that means more pavements and more cars," says Grunble. Matuszeski says what is happening to the Chesapeake Bay can be seen in coastal areas around the world. But he hopes that a new awareness of the bay's fragility, eco-friendly legislation and new technology can help save it. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/4/38230.html |