Effects of Air Pullution
Effects of Air Pullution
Effects of Air Pullution
PULLUTION
What is Air Pollution?
Headache Cancer
Death
Harming Animals and Plants
Wildlife can experience many of the same negative
health effects of air pollution that humans do. Damage
to respiratory systems is the most common effect on
animals, but neurological problems and skin irritations
are also common.
There are many other ways that air pollution affects
living things, such as damaging the habitat, water, and
food sources that plants and animals need to survive.
Causing Acid Rain
Burning fossil fuels releases sulfur and nitrogen
oxides into the atmosphere. Acid rain forms when
sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide mix with water
droplets in the atmosphere to make sulfuric acid and
nitric acid. Winds can carry these pollutants for
thousands of miles, until they fall to the Earth's
surface as acid rain, which damages the leaves of
vegetation, increases the acidity of soils and water,
and is linked to over 500 deaths each year.
Buildings and other structures are also
impacted by acid rain, which causes an
estimated five billion dollars of property
damage each year. Acid rain dissolves mortar
between bricks, causes stone foundations to
become unstable, and is destroying ancient
buildings and statues carved from marble and
limestone.
Making a Hole in the Ozone Layer
The hole in the ozone layer is caused by air
pollutants. Chemicals used as refrigerants, such as
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), contain chlorine atoms.
Releasing chlorine atoms into the atmosphere destroys
ozone. A single chlorine atom can destroy thousands of
ozone molecules. The ozone layer blocks harmful
ultraviolet-C (UVC) and ultraviolet-B (UVB) radiation
from the Sun — it protects us in a way that is similar to
putting sunscreen on your skin to prevent sunburn.
The ozone hole puts all living things at risk by
increasing the amount of ultraviolet radiation that
reaches the surface. Exposure to this radiation
increases the risk of skin cancer in humans,
restricts growth and development in plants, slows
the development of fish and amphibians, and
reduces the number of phytoplankton in marine
ecosystems. It also causes natural and synthetic
materials to breakdown at an accelerated rate.
Effects of Greenhouse Gas Pollution
Greenhouse gas pollution is causing climate
change. As a result, ecosystems are changing faster
than plants and animals can adapt, and many species
are going extinct. Marine ecosystems are vulnerable
to ocean acidification caused when carbon dioxide
emitted into the atmosphere is dissolved in seawater.
Ocean acidification makes it difficult for many
marine species to grow shells and skeletons.
Melting ice sheets, warming oceans, and
extreme weather conditions are examples of
how climate changes caused by greenhouse
gas pollution threaten ecosystems across the
Earth. In many cases, the decline of one or a
few species due to air pollution can topple the
balance of entire ecosystems.