Dead birds spur cleanup of longstanding DDT contamination

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By DAVID POULSON
Capital News Service
LANSING — When residents of St. Louis described the death of birds in their small mid-Michigan community, Matt Zwiernik recalled studies by another Michigan State University scientist more than 50 years earlier.
“It was exactly as George Wallace described it,” said Zwiernik, director of the university’s Wildlife Toxicology Laboratory. “They had tremors and seizures and they were fluttering on the ground as if they had a broken wing or were taking a dust bath.”

Deadbirds

Workers excavate DDT-contaminated soil from yards in St. Louis. Credit: David Poulson


And they soon died.
Wallace was the MSU ornithologist whose research into how the insecticide DDT killed birds was cited by Rachel Carson in her landmark book Silent Spring. The book led to a U.S. ban of DDT and is credited with helping launch the modern environmental movement.

Half a century later, studies by Zwiernik’s team helped secure funds for excavation of roughly 30,000 tons of DDT-contaminated dirt from the yards of 60 homes adjacent to the site of the now-defunct Velsicol Chemical Co.
The company had produced DDT and a raft of other chemicals that authorities have been trying to clean from the abandoned factory and affiliated sites for decades. Another 15,000 to 20,000 tons of soil from 37 residential yards – and whatever doesn’t get finished of this year’s plan – are slated for excavation next year as part of a $12 million state and federal cleanup of a nine-block area.
The summer cleanup was based on ecological considerations rather than human health threats. That’s because birds are more sensitive to DDT than people.
Still, some health experts raised questions about human health risks and the length of time it took to address the contamination at St. Louis, in Gratiot County.
Authorities told residents that they’d have to eat a tablespoon of the dirt in their yards every day for many years before their health was compromised, neighborhood resident Becki Childs said.
Yet she worried about her three young sons: “They are boys. They put their hands in the dirt. That’s what they do.”
Most of the contamination is less than 12 inches deep.
“We believe most of the material was windblown from the facility, and our sampling has shown that,” said Tom Alcamo, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency manager of the site, which is classified for cleanup under the federal Superfund law.
But some hotspots are as deep as 4 feet and perhaps deeper. Alcamo and others say those deep pockets of contamination may be from soil from the factory site that was used decades earlier as fill.
Sampling in the neighborhood by state regulators in 2005, 2007 and 2008 showed some areas of DDT and other chemicals at unacceptably high levels, Alcamo said. More extensive sampling was done after the EPA approved a remedy in 2012.
Recent bird studies helped more quickly secure funds to remove the contamination, officials say.
From May to mid-July of 2013, Zwiernik’s lab collected dead birds from the neighborhood and examined nests and eggs. His team of volunteers, landowners and researchers was challenged to respond to reports of dying birds before they disappeared.
“As these things flutter around, they are very desirable to the local feline population,” Zwiernik said.
Nonetheless, he found at least one dead bird every time he looked during the team’s weekly neighborhood patrols.
Zwiernik found dead birds linked to acute chemical exposure.
“I’ve spent a lot of time in the woods and a lot of time on Superfund sites,” he said. “You do find dead birds by random chance.”
This was not that type of situation, however: “This was stark.”
Among the findings:
• Levels of DDT and associated chemicals in dead birds ranged from 155 to 1,043 parts per million, some of the highest ever recorded in wild birds. Other studies have indicated death can occur at 30 parts per million.
• Of the 29 dead birds the wildlife laboratory examined, 12 had abnormal tissues including brain lesions and liver abnormalities linked to DDT exposure.
• Eggs also had high levels of DDT.
• No eggs hatched in 47 percent of the nests examined. That was true of only 12 percent of nests in studies elsewhere in the Tittabawassee watershed.
Neighborhood disruption is significant, and Alcamo’s skillset as a Superfund manager includes those of an engineer, landscaper, social worker — and diplomat.
Bulldozers, skid loaders, dump trucks and hard-hatted workers with shovels, chainsaws, earth tampers, potted plants and new trees worked through the neighborhood. Devices on tripods and attached to some workers sniffed the air, making sure contaminated dust does not exceed health limits.
Resident Terry White Jr. said he was initially skeptical about the cleanup and even now is unhappy about the removal of some of his neighbor’s trees. But he’s pleased with his new lawn and inspired to take better care of it, even asking for a schedule of when to fertilize.
“I had hills in the front and back that they flattened,” he said. “And they gave me grass.”
But some residents are angry.
“We fought tooth and nail to keep our trees,” Childs said. She and her husband put a “for sale” sign in their yard the day workers came to replace the soil.
Their complaint is a common one: Trees between the sidewalk and street are on city-owned property. And while homeowners have some latitude to retain some soil around their own trees to spare them, city officials have opted for complete soil replacement on city land. That means the removal of the large, old trees lining the streets.
Experts say that the advantage of retaining trees for birds to nest and for aesthetic and other ecological services can offset the disadvantage of not excavating as deeply to spare them.
“There is a great likelihood that the trees provide an ecological benefit greater than any possible contamination that resides underneath them,” Zwiernik said.
Even if soil immediately below the trees isn’t completely excavated, the overall exposure of birds to DDT in the neighborhood will be much less than elsewhere where levels are below concern, he said. His advice: Monitor the birds’ recovery before deciding if removal of city trees is necessary.
The disruption is just the latest in a long history of a factory that gained global attention for accidentally shipping a fire retardant as a livestock feed supplement in the mid-1970s. That caused the slaughter of thousands of cows, pigs and poultry to keep the chemical PBB from further contaminating the food supply.
Then, in 1982, Velsicol entered a cleanup agreement with state and federal authorities. It included building a slurry wall around the former plant site and capping it with clay to contain rather than remove contaminants. The deal was among the early agreements under the Superfund law designed to clean up particularly bad sites. Michigan officials hailed it as a landmark.
But it proved to be a failed strategy.
Fish in the nearby Pine River continued to show high levels of contamination. Contaminated sediments weren’t covered with clean sediments as hoped. And the slurry wall leaked.
From 1998 to 2006, additional cleanup actions, including dredging the river, were taken at a cost of almost $100 million, according to EPA. Water is pumped from trenches by the plant site and hauled away for treatment to keep it from polluting the river.
Progress has been made. Homeowners in the cleanup area will get an EPA letter certifying that their yards have been replaced with clean soil – a measure designed to make it easier to sell their homes.
Also:
• The fish are dramatically cleaner in the Pine River adjacent to the plant site
• A $45 million water system serving St. Louis and Alma is expected to be completed in 2016. The old one has contaminants below levels of concern, but replacement makes it easier to treat contaminated groundwater at the plant site.
• Design of a new cleanup plan for the site could be completed in 2015 and started in 2016, depending on funding. Under consideration: heating the soil with electricity to make contaminants easier to recover.
• EPA expects to propose by October a cleanup plan for a nearby separate Superfund site where Velsicol dumped and burned chemicals.
Says Alcamo, “We’ve got a good story to tell here.”
If the residential excavation proves successful, it will be especially good for the birds.
“We have birds falling from the sky,” Zwiernik said. “They are essentially dead before they know they are dead.”

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