NATURAL PERSPECTIVES -- VIC LEIPZIG AND LOU MURRAY
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Vic and I argued about greenhouse gases the other day at Alice’s
Breakfast in the Park.
Some couples rail at each other about weighty, important matters such
as whose turn it is to take out the garbage or who should apologize for
whatever gaffe set off the last argument. Not us. We settled those issues
long ago.
It’s always Vic’s turn to take out the trash, and, wise man that he
is, Vic knows that the husband is always wrong. No, we don’t fight over
such important things. We bicker over meaningless, trivial topics like
global warming.
The current global warming crisis is due primarily to ever-increasing
amounts of atmospheric carbon dioxide, a gas that is produced by burning
fossil fuels. Other gases contribute to the greenhouse effect, but carbon
dioxide is the biggie.
I wanted to write this column on the health impacts of global warming.
One of my hot buttons is the effect of the environment on human health.
My bachelor’s degree was in environmental biology. I earned a doctorate
in biomedical science and was on the faculty at the Harbor/UCLA Medical
Center. How pollution impacts human health is a natural area of concern
for me. Vic’s training was more along zoological lines, so he has a
different perspective. We just don’t see eye to eye on the chief impact
of greenhouse gases and global warming. At this point, everyone except
George W. Bush knows the planet is warming. Shifting weather patterns
will cause some parts of the planet to experience more storms and
flooding while other parts will experience more droughts.
Will global warming affect Huntington Beach directly? You bet. Melting
of glaciers and polar ice caps will cause more frequent flooding of
coastal cities (Hello? That’s us!) and saltwater intrusion into
freshwater tables (That’s us again!). Disease incidence will rise with
global warming. A warmer, damper planet means more opportunity for
mosquitoes and mosquito-borne diseases such as malaria, dengue fever,
yellow fever, Rift Valley fever, encephalitis and West Nile fever. These
diseases are already spreading. Increased flooding also will result in
more cholera outbreaks due to water contamination and unsanitary
conditions.
While some parts of the planet will experience more flooding, other
parts will be drier. More droughts mean mass starvation in marginal
societies, spread of rodent-borne diseases such as Hanta virus, and more
fires, which can increase suffering from smoke-aggravated respiratory
illnesses. Increased summer temperatures will increase smog and pollen
production, which will aggravate respiratory conditions such as asthma.
We will see increased suffering of our children and the elderly and
increased deaths due to heat stroke and respiratory conditions. I cannot
for the life of me understand how people can be so complacent about
global warming, especially the intellectual lightweight who is currently
warming a chair in the oval office.
Vic sees an even greater danger. He believes that the most serious
result of increased atmospheric carbon dioxide will be alterations in
plant growth patterns on a global scale. As the amount of carbon dioxide
rises, it will stimulate plant growth. Isn’t better growth of plants,
especially farm crops, a good thing? That’s what the petroleum industry
and its biggest friend in Washington would have you think.
Here’s the problem with greenhouse gases in regard to plants. Carbon
dioxide promotes plant growth differentially and unpredictably. By
promoting some species at the expense of others, the natural balance of
every ecosystem on earth will be thrown off. In forests, grasslands, even
farm fields, some plants will thrive while others are out-competed, along
with the animals that depend on them. One of the changes already seen in
the American south is that wood-producing trees are growing more
rapidly--but the quality of the wood is reduced. The carbon dioxide level
of earth’s atmosphere went up 30% in the last century and there is a
measurable increase every year. No one can really predict the effect of
these atmospheric changes with precision. But they will occur. Mankind is
engaged in the largest-scale experiment ever performed. And we all live
inside the test tube.
So that’s what we argued about over breakfast. I wanted to emphasize
health impacts while Vic wanted to emphasize ecosystem shifts. What we
did agree on was that greenhouse gases are produced when we burn fossil
fuels. We pour more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every time we
drive somewhere, every time we light a fire in the fireplace, every time
we use electricity or burn natural gas.
It’s going to cause major shifts in ecosystems and cause mass
extinctions of marginal species around the world.
And it’s going to kill millions of us in the very near future unless
we all make major changes in our lives. Write to “Dubya” and let him know
that you care about such trivia.
* VIC LEIPZIG and LOU MURRAY are Huntington Beach residents and
environmentalists. They can be reached at o7 [email protected] .
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