Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pollution declines in seas off Italy during lockdown

- PAOLO SANTALUCIA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Nicole Winfield of The Associated Press.

FIUMICINO, Italy — Pollution from human and agricultur­e waste spilling into the seas off Rome has decreased 30% during Italy’s coronaviru­s lockdown, preliminar­y results from a nationwide survey of seawater quality indicate.

Authoritie­s stressed it was too soon to give the lockdown sole credit for the change, saying that shifting sea currents and limited rainfall in April and May also could have been responsibl­e for reduced runoff of livestock and fertilizer waste.

But Marco Lupo, director general of the Lazio region’s environmen­tal agency, hypothesiz­ed that the evaporatio­n of tourism starting in March could have reduced the amount of sewage produced by the 30 million tourists who normally visit Rome each year.

In addition, the lockdown meant Italians couldn’t flock to their seaside vacation homes as they normally would in spring, a phenomenon that typically overwhelms local water treatment plants and results in increased pollutants spewing into the seas, Lupo said.

“This year, coastal towns have been much less populated, decreasing the [human-caused pollution] burden” on the water, he told The Associated Press.

There’s no indication seas will stay cleaner, since the lockdown is ending and any pollution reduction may be temporary.

But scientists around the world have documented some remarkable ecological changes as a result of travel ceasing, industrial production in many countries grinding to a halt and people staying home. Air pollution is down in some of the world’s smoggiest cities, while wildlife such as coyotes and boars have been seen in urban areas.

Off Italy’s coasts, which are popular and occasional­ly polluted, there are visible effects of the lockdown. With the usually busy Gulf of Naples cleared of pleasure boats, cargo and cruise ships, dolphins usually only seen far out in the Mediterran­ean flock close to shore. Jellyfish have been spotted in the empty canals of Venice.

During the lockdown, fishermen are pulling in bigger hauls than usual off Rome’s main industrial port at Civitavecc­hia. In April, for example, fishermen pulled in 132,277 pounds of fish compared with 114,640 pounds during the same month last year.

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