How does this affect me?
Changes in land use from a natural forested or vegetated state to
urbanized areas can lead to considerable changes in local conditions
over time. These changes include:
Heat Island Effect
Buildings and impervious surfaces such as pavement are non-reflective
and absorb heat. This raises the near-surface air temperature
which in turn increases the cost associated with cooling.
Flooding and Increased Rate, or Velocity of Polluted Runoff
Polluted runoff moves quickly across impervious surfaces into
the nearest freshwater stream, rather than absorbing into soils,
wetlands and other natural landscapes. Rapid stormwater increases
the velocity of streams, making them wider, wilder and stripping
away valuable fish habitat. This fish/salmon habitat includes
the small ripples, rocks and uneven bottom surfaces that fish
eggs need to grow. Eliminating these spaces reduces the number
of fish that survive to adulthood, which reduces sport fishing
revenues, commercial fishing revenues and food for Orcas, a major
tourism attraction. Increased velocity also increases flooding,
resulting in damage to homes and other forms of personal property.
Toxic
and Persistent Chemicals in Freshwater Systems
Increases in impervious surfaces increase the amount of chemicals,
oils and other residues which end up in the human food chain.
They can also lead to impaired freshwater quality that is cleaned
up at considerable taxpayer expense. Many of these chemicals attach
themselves to the stream bottom (sediment) and to the fatty tissue
of fish and other animals. Persistent bioaccumulative and toxic
chemicals (PBTs) build up with each successive eater in the food
chain. In most cases, we are seeing contamination that lasts for
over 30 years even if the chemical has stopped being used. Polychlorinated
biphenyls, or PCBs, as well as flame retardants (polybrominated
diphenyl ethers, or PBDEs) are some examples.
Pathogens and Bacteria in Freshwater Systems
Increases in impervious surfaces also increase the amount of
bacteria and pathogens associated with the fecal waste from wild
and domestic animals as well as humans. Some of these can cause
illness in humans from swimming and eating from a contaminated
freshwater stream. If serious enough, giardia, hepatitis or other
illnesses can occur.
Reduction in the Quantity of Water
Impervious surfaces interrupt the natural cycle in which drinking
water is replenished, or put back into underground aquifer and
groundwater systems. This leads to decreases in the amount of
water available for human use such as drinking, livestock watering,
irrigation, manufacturing and recreation. Stripping streams of
shading vegetation also increases water temperature, affecting
fish health and reproduction.
Splitting
(Fragmentation) of Wildlife Habitat
Spread out development patterns disrupt wildlife habitat by breaking
it into small pieces that do not support protection from predators,
reproduction, taking care of offspring and food sources. This
in turn decreases biodiversity which contains the services referenced
above. Since Washington State is fifth in the nation for wildlife
viewing revenues, losing wildlife habitat translates into potential
revenue loss for rural communities. The same holds for true for
BC whose nature based tourism industry generates $2 billion each
year.
Loss of Farms and Forestlands
Farms and forests are economically and environmentally productive
land types, indelibly tied to our local and regional cultural
heritage. Farms provide a stunning visual landscape, revenue,
employment and more localized food distribution systems. Smaller
farm and forestry operations represent multi-generational traditions,
many artisan in nature, which provide both a sense of place as
well as niche marketing opportunities. The loss of these land
types means lost economic productive capacity, wildlife habitat
(which itself is a revenue source) and increased infrastructure
costs. Larger forestlands provide intact landscapes that can maintain
habitat continuity.3
Urbanization as a Source of Shellfish Degradation
The
coastline has become an increasingly attractive place to live,
with 85 percent of the 12-county Puget Sound population living
within 10 miles or 16 kilometers of the shores of Puget Sound.4
Increased urbanization has accentuated impacts in coastal shellfish
harvest because the growing areas are just meters from the developed
land. Stormwater runoff reaching these areas does not receive
any pretreatment before entering the estuaries. Notably, this
runoff contains fecal
coliform (warm-blooded animal waste) that shellfish accumulate.
Advanced studies from North and South Carolina indicate that shellfish
growing areas can be affected when as little as five percent of
the watershed is developed.5