Air Pollution Air pollution doesn’t just cloud the air we breathe. It can also harm our land and water. What goes up must come down, and pollution released into the air—by cars, trucks, gas-powered lawn tools, power plants and other sources—will fall back to the earth’s surface, where it could wind up in our waterways.
airborne pollution particles fall onto the land or into the water, sometimes in the form of dry particles and sometimes attached to rain, snow or other precipitation.
Climate change A changing climate will affect the Chesapeake Bay. Some effects—like rising seas, warming water temperatures and prolonged periods of extreme weather—have already been observed in the region. Other impacts include a rise in coastal flooding and shoreline erosion and changes in wildlife abundance and migration patterns. Chesapeake Bay Program partners are working to increase the climate resilience of resources and communities across the watershed.
Agriculture Close to one-quarter of land in the Chesapeake Bay watershed is devoted to agricultural production. Agriculture is essential to all people: farms provide us with food and fiber, natural areas, and aesthetic and environmental benefits. But agriculture is also the single largest source of nutrient and sediment pollution entering the Bay. While conventional tillage, fertilizers and pesticides can be beneficial to crops, their excessive use can pollute rivers and streams, pushing nutrients and sediment into waterways.
Agriculture is the single largest source of nutrient and sediment pollution entering the Chesapeake Bay. According to 2012 estimates from the Bay Program, agriculture contributes 42 percent of the nitrogen, 58 percent of the phosphorous and 58 percent of the sediment entering the Bay. Unfortunately, some agricultural practices—including over-irrigating farmland, over-tilling soil and over-applying fertilizers and pesticides—can push pollution into the Bay and its local waterways.
Chemical Contaminants Almost three-quarters of the Chesapeake Bay’s tidal waters are considered impaired by chemical contaminants. These contaminants include pesticides, pharmaceuticals, metals and more, and can harm the health of both humans and wildlife. From the insecticides that are put on farm fields to the cleaners we use to disinfect our homes, contaminants can enter the Bay and its tributaries in several different ways. While production bans have lowered the presence of some contaminants in the watershed, others are still widely used today.
Small, bottom-dwelling organisms take up contaminants through skin contact or while feeding Larger fish eat contaminated organisms and accumulate toxins in their tissues Birds, mammals and other wildlife eat contaminated fish