Cape Times

Moss might be a cheap city pollution monitor

- Sophie Hares

South-east Asia and the eastern Mediterran­ean have the worst air quality

TEPIC, Mexico: Delicate mosses found on rocks and trees in cities around the world can be used to measure the impact of atmospheri­c change and could prove a lowcost way to monitor urban pollution, according to Japanese scientists.

The “bioindicat­or” responds to pollution or drought-stress by changing shape, density or disappeari­ng, allowing scientists to calculate atmospheri­c alteration­s, said Yoshitaka Oishi, associate professor at Fukui Prefectura­l University.

“This method is very cost effective and important for getting informatio­n about atmospheri­c conditions,” Oishi told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“Mosses are a common plant in all cities, so we can use this method in many countries… they have a big potential to be bioindicat­ors,” said Oishi, who analysed nearly 50 types of moss for the study.

Oishi said humid cities where moss thrives could benefit most from using bryophytes, a collective term for mosses, hornworts and liverworts, as bioindicat­ors, adding that moss could be monitored in its natural environmen­t or cultivated for analysis.

In a research paper published in the Landscape and Urban Planning journal, Oishi and a colleague described how they studied the effect of nitrogen pollution, air quality and drought-stress on moss found over a 3 km2 area in Hachioji City in northweste­rn Tokyo. The study showed severe drought-stress tended to occur in areas with high levels of nitrogen pollution, which it said raised concerns over the impact on health and biodiversi­ty.

However, the scientists could not effectivel­y measure air purity, which affects the number of moss types as pollution levels in the sample area were not high enough, said Oishi. “If the air pollution is severe, the purity is also evaluated by moss… the change of the moss is very diverse according to the environmen­tal problem.”

Bioindicat­ors mosses, which such as generally absorb water and nutrients from their immediate environmen­ts, were often cheaper to use than other methods of environmen­tal evaluation, and can also reflect changes to ecosystems, said the scientists.

The World Health Organisati­on says 88% of city dwellers are exposed to annual pollution levels that exceed its air quality guidelines.

South-east Asia and the eastern Mediterran­ean have the worst air quality, followed by countries in Latin America and Africa.

“We believe this method can contribute to the evaluation of atmospheri­c pollution in other areas.”

 ?? Picture: WIKIPEDIA ?? TOOL: Moss can act as a ‘bioindicat­or’ to show how polluted a city is.
Picture: WIKIPEDIA TOOL: Moss can act as a ‘bioindicat­or’ to show how polluted a city is.

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