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Reduce your nitrogen footprint

April 7, 3:21 PMPortland Green Living ExaminerMaureen Mackey
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 Lessen your nitrogen footprint on the environment

Our carbon footprint is not the only impression we leave on the environment. It’s time we reckoned with what a nitrogen footprint is, and especially about the role excess nitrogen plays in global warming and damage to marine ecosystems.

Nitrogen is an essential element in our atmosphere, and all life requires nitrogen compounds. Yet our environment is being threatened by reactive forms of nitrogen, created by burning fossil fuels and agricultural fertilizer run-off. According to Discovery News, these reactive forms of nitrogen produce smog, acid rain, coastal dead zones, climate change and a growing ozone hole.

Scientists are studying ways to combat these effects, including more precise fertilizer application to prevent run-off, along with methods of capturing tailpipe and power plant emissions. Yet there are things that individuals can do to reduce their nitrogen footprint as well.

One is to reduce your own fossil-fuel burning emissions. Ways to do that include driving less, using alternative fuels, and switching from a power lawn mower to one that is electric or battery operated. Even better, use a manual or push mower to mow your lawn.

And while you’re mowing, take a good long look at your lawn for another way to reduce your nitrogen footprint. Combat the effects of excess nitrogen by reducing the number of times you fertilize your lawn, or stop fertilizing it altogether. Replacing your lawn with groundcover, or a mix of plants and hardscape, will prevent fertilizer run-off from getting into our streams and contributing to marine dead zones.

Denizens of Chesapeake Bay, which is the largest estuary in the United States, are especially concerned with the pollution threatening their waterway. The Chesapeake Bay Foundation has created an online nitrogen calculator to help residents of the watershed area lessen the amount of excess nitrogen and other contaminants polluting their bay.

Here on the other side of the country, we Portlanders can learn from the Chesapeake Bay calculator how to reduce our own nitrogen footprints. And that’s a goal worth taking steps for.

 

For more info: Read "Nitrogen at a Glance," by Isabel Cowles, The Huffington Post, posted Sept. 2, 2008; and also "Ocean Dead-Zones May Be Linked to Global Warming," Science Daily, posted Feb. 15, 2008.

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