| Unique Air-Quality Monitoring
Facility Opens Last September, our college,
in cooperation with Penn States Institutes of the Environment,
opened a unique Air Quality Learning and Demonstration Center on a
hillside in a scenic area near the middle of the Universitys
Arboretum.
The man who has been the driving force behind the facility, plant pathologist
John Skelly, stops short of saying it is the only one of its kind in the country
and maybe the world. But he thinks so.
We dont know of any others, he says proudly, gesturing to the
small building housing sensitive electronic equipment that gives continuous readouts
on a dozen air quality parameters, a teaching pavilion complete with
Internet connections where classes can be held, a garden where ozone-sensitive
and ozone-tolerant plants grow in neat rows, and a compact car-sized topless
plastic cylinder where plants bathe in a constant flow of charcoal-filtered,
nearly ozone-free air. Growing in the open air next to the cylinder are much
less healthy specimens of the same plant varieties, demonstrating how much pollutants
stunt growth and promote plant disease.
The colleges Air Quality Learning and Demonstration Center sits atop
a hill in what will be the Penn State Arboretum, where the top of nearby Beaver
Stadium can just be seen over the trees. The facility is a unique blend of
the State College Air Quality Monitoring Station, jointly operated by Penn
State and the state Department of Environmental Protection, and an air pollution
teaching and research center where the amount of ozone in the air, and its
impact on plants, is constantly monitored.
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In a sign of the times, Skelly
points out, the information generated by the air-quality monitoring
equipment soon will show up in real time on the centers Web site,
and pictures of the plants growing in the cylinder, under the watchful
eye of a Web camera, also will be available on the Internet.
Its kind of like watching paint dry, Skelly admits, but
it will be an important teaching tool and documentation of the effect ozone is
having on plants. There are periods when the ozone content in our air is very
high, and people with health problems will be able to consult our Web site and
make decisions about going out for strenuous activities.
By locating the State College Air Quality Monitoring Station, jointly operated
by Penn State and the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, at
this site with educational amenities around it, we can offer programs about air
pollutions effects on agricultural crops, forest trees, and native plants
in Pennsylvania and the Northeast, says Skelly.
Several visitor-friendly research techniques are demonstrated within the confines
of the center, which has been supported by the Department of Environmental
Protection (DEP), Pennsylvania electric utility companies, private companies,
and individual donors.
Although many are aware that air pollution can cause respiratory
problems, few are familiar with its harmful effects on the environment,
Skelly notes.
When exposed to high concentrations of pollutants, some plants, including agricultural
crops, have a shorter growing season and succumb more easily to drought, insects,
and diseases. Animals and insects that depend on ozone-sensitive plants
for their food supply also suffer when that food source is damaged or depleted, Skelly
says. The monarch butterfly, for example, relies heavily on common milkweed,
and that plant is very sensitive to ozone.
The need to measure the impact of excess ozone is one of the reasons why the
Department of Plant Pathology and support personnel from the Penn State Institutes
of the Environment maintain five other air-quality monitoring stations scattered
around northcentral Pennsylvania, in addition to the one at the Arboretum.
With funding from DEP, these stations provide information essential to understanding
how air pollutants affect human health, agricultural crops, forests, and plant
communities.
The location of this monitoring station within the Arboretum is especially
advantageous, Skelly says, because the Arboretum will provide an
ideal venue for outreach activities related to this research. Skelly, who
retired this summer, has turned the center's reins over to Dennis Decoteau, professor
of horticulture and plant ecosystem health.
Jeff Mulhollem
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