🌱 Artificial turf is great for rainy PNW sports, but it also releases a salmon-killing chemical
Oregon Public Broadcasting
0:00 (uplifting music)- If you've ever played
0:01 outdoor sports ball in the Pacific Northwest,
0:03 there's a good chance you've played on artificial turf.
0:06 (bell dings) It holds up better than grass in the rain,
0:09 and it requires less upkeep.
0:11 But researchers from the University of British
0:13 Columbia have discovered a disturbing side effect.
0:17 The water running off those fields could be hurting salmon.
0:21 (whistle blows) Yellow card.
0:23 Artificial turf fields aren't just sheets of green plastic grass.
0:27 They include infill,
0:28 which gives the surface a little squishy give when you step on it.
0:32 The most common infill used is crumb rubber,
0:35 basically ground up old tires, and this is where the trouble comes.
0:39 Tires contain an additive called 6PPD, which makes them more durable.
0:44 But when it interacts with ozone in the air,
0:47 it transforms into 6PPD-quinone, the salmon slayer.
0:52 The researchers tested for 6PPD-quinone in turf fields around BC,
0:58 and found concentrations more than three times
1:00 the levels known to kill coho salmon,
1:04 and the fields can continue to leach the chemical years after they're installed.
1:08 (whistle blows) That's a red.
1:10 The good news?
1:10 Well, there are ways to filter out the salmon
1:13 slaying chemical before it runs off into streams.