Scientist
says pollution from China is killing a Japanese island’s endangered
trees –
‘This
is proof that when such a big country industrializes, its effect will
spread everywhere’
24
April, 2013
A
mysterious pestilence has befallen this island’s primeval forests,
leaving behind the bleached, skeletal remains of dead trees that now
dot the dark green mountainsides. Osamu Nagafuchi, an environmental
engineer with a passion for the island and its rugged terrain,
believes he knows the culprit: airborne pollutants from smog-belching
China, hundreds of miles upwind.
For
years, Mr. Nagafuchi’s theory was ignored by fellow scientists and
even mocked by bureaucrats in the national government who administer
the forests on this southwestern island. But Japan has begun taking
his warnings more seriously, as the nation has been gripped by a
national health scare over rising levels of potentially dangerous
airborne particles that have swept into other parts of Japan and that
many now believe were produced by China, its huge and rapidly
industrializing neighbor.
These
fears have reached a new level recently as China itself has issued
more public warnings about the growing health risks from its cities’
gray, soupy air. While Mr. Nagafuchi and a small number of
collaborators say their research is not politically motivated, they
admit that they may be finding more receptivity among a public that
already resents China for supplanting Japan as Asia’s largest
economy, and for what is seen as its haughty attitude in a
territorial dispute over islands both countries claim.
Japanese
officials still dispute whether airborne pollutants are responsible
for killing the pine trees. But they and other scientists have at
least begun to view Yakushima, which is far from Japan’s own
industrial centers, as a pristine laboratory for understanding how
China’s growing environmental problems could be affecting its
neighbors.
Many
islanders are already believers, and they worry that the pollutants
may be threatening their health.
“We
are starting to feel like the canary in a coal mine,” said the
island’s mayor, Koji Araki. “Our island is right downwind from
China, so we get the brunt of it.”
Whatever
the cause, the tree die-off is a worrisome turn for this small,
mountainous island off Kyushu, the southernmost of Japan’s main
islands, whose moss-carpeted forests provide a rare patch of
primitive nature in an otherwise densely populated nation. There are
fears here that a growing smog problem could scare off the hikers and
other ecotourists upon whom many of the island’s 14,000 residents
depend for their livelihoods.
Most
visitors come to see Yakushima’s majestic cedar trees, which have
so far been unaffected by the mysterious ailment killing the pines.
The cedars won the island the distinction of a Unesco World Heritage
site in 1993.
The
cedars were logged for centuries to build some of the great Buddhist
temples in the ancient capital, Kyoto. The biggest remaining tree,
the gnarled Jomon cedar, measures 16 feet around at the base and is
estimated to be at least 2,600 years old.
The
dying trees are from an endangered species of pine that is found only
on Yakushima and a neighboring island. Mr. Nagafuchi, a professor of
ecosystem studies at the University of Shiga Prefecture in central
Japan, said he noticed the problem when satellite photographs showed
a large increase in the number of dead trees between 1992 and 1996.
Mr.
Nagafuchi, then a public employee for a city in Kyushu, had already
found blackened snow while hiking to Yakushima’s mountaintops in
1992. He started collecting and analyzing the snow as a sort of
weekend hobby. To his surprise, he found it contained silicon,
aluminum and other byproducts from the burning of coal, which is used
to heat homes in China. Using maps of winds, he theorized that the
pollutants were carried here from China, across the East China Sea.
The
discovery drove Mr. Nagafuchi to quit his city job and eventually
become a university professor, doing much of his research on
Yakushima. He has set up small monitoring stations around the island
to measure levels in the air of ozone and sulfur emissions, which are
typically the byproducts of burned coal or automobile exhaust.
On
a recent afternoon, Mr. Nagafuchi climbed to the highest of those
stations, atop Mt. Kuromi, a windswept peak that rises 6,000 feet
above the sea below. After hooking up his laptop to download data
from the station’s small digital recorder, he pointed out the thin,
gauzy haze that clouded what he said should have been pristine air.
“The
worst is when winds blow from Beijing and Tianjin,” two Chinese
cities about 900 miles to the northwest, said Mr. Nagafuchi, 62, who
visits Yakushima once a month to collect the data readings. “This
is proof that when such a big country industrializes, its effect will
spread everywhere.”
When
they first started publicizing the findings in the mid-1990s, Mr.
Nagafuchi and his main partner, Kenshi Tetsuka, an islander who
started a small environmental group to protect the pines, were at
first derided by forestry officials and established scientists who
said they were sensationalizing the die-off to get public attention.
Some scientists questioned why the tree deaths slowed even as China’s
pollution problems have grown. Mr. Nagafuchi says he believes the
pollution quickly killed off the weak trees, leaving the hardier
ones.
His
ideas began to win limited acceptance in the early 2000s, amid
evidence of a growing influx of Chinese pollutants across Japan. The
national government’s Forestry Agency began to allow Mr. Nagafuchi
to set up his monitoring stations, and is doing joint research with
him and Mr. Tetsuka, though it still believes the deaths are caused
by an infestation of bugs and a runaway population of deer, which can
strip small trees of pine needles.
They
point out that there had been die-offs of pine trees on Yakushima
even before China’s economic takeoff.
“We
don’t agree with him, but we respect his research,” said Hiroharu
Ijima, a Forestry Agency official on Yakushima.
Public
anxieties about environmental effects from China have soared this
year, after Beijing recorded alarming increases in pollution levels.
That was followed by officials in western Japan issuing warnings in
their own cities of high levels of particulate matter measuring 2.5
micrometers or less, known as PM 2.5, that are small enough to become
embedded in human lungs. Several Japanese cities have issued warnings
this year for residents to stay indoors when the pollutant levels
spike.
When
the air grew particularly hazy on Yakushima one day last month, local
officials asked if they could use one of Mr. Nagafuchi’s monitoring
stations to measure PM 2.5. The level was above
government-recommended safe levels, prompting officials to order a
local elementary school to cancel a field trip to a nearby forest.
Residents
who believe the pollution is caused by China described feeling
helpless, saying they doubt there is any action their government can
take even if it becomes convinced Mr. Nagafuchi is right.
“There
is not much we can do about this, except ask the Chinese to spend
more money on environmental cleanup,” said Mr. Tetsuka, Mr.
Nagafuchi’s research assistant. “I’m afraid it will only get
worse and worse.”
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