Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Setting limits: Using air pollution thresholds to protect and restore US ecosystems

December 1, 2011

More than four decades of research provide unequivocal evidence that sulfur, nitrogen, and mercury pollution have altered, and will continue to alter, our nation's lands and waters. The emission and deposition of air pollutants harm native plants and animals, degrade water quality, affect forest productivity, and are damaging to human health. Many air quality policies limit emissions at the source but these control measures do not always consider ecosystem impacts. Air pollution thresholds at which ecological effects are observed, such as critical loads, are effective tools for assessing the impacts of air pollution on essential ecosystem services and for informing public policy. U.S. ecosystems can be more effectively protected and restored by using a combination of emissions-based approaches and science-based thresholds of ecosystem damage.

Publication Year 2011
Title Setting limits: Using air pollution thresholds to protect and restore US ecosystems
Authors Mark E. Fenn, Kathleen F. Lambert, Tamara F. Blett, Douglas A. Burns, Linda H. Pardo, Gary M. Lovett, Richard A. Haeuber, David C. Evers, Charles T. Driscoll, Dean S. Jeffries
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Issues in Ecology
Index ID 70006178
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization New York Water Science Center