About Us |  Contact Us |  FAQ's | Newsroom

[design image slice] U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service on faded trees in medium light green background [design image slice] more faded trees
[design image] green box with curved corner
   

Air Resource Management


Above: Wyoming's Fitzpatrick Wilderness



  About Air Resource Management






  Class I Wilderness Areas






  Technical and Program Information






  What's New?


A new stream sampling video produced by the Forest Service Missoula Technology and Development Center for the Air Program is now available at http://www.fs.fed.us/t-d/pubs/flash/fla08252F02. The username and passwords are both "t-d".




Air is an Integrating Resource

Air is inseparable from all other resources. It is the key component linking virtually all living and non-living components of the earth. The Forest Service works to protect air quality by working with industry and regulators, monitoring air and the resources affected by air pollution and by providing the public with information about air quality. Poor air quality decreases visibility, acidifies or disrupts the natural balance in lakes and streams, injures plant and animal communities and harms human health.

Progress has been made toward improving air quality across the United States since the enactment of the Clean Air Act in 1977. But air quality on Forest lands and even wilderness areas is far from pristine. As the human population with its resulting urbanization and industrialization continue to grow, the Forest Service Air Program must understand how air quality affects resources in order to work cooperatively with industry, state and federal groups to prevent and reduce air pollution and its effects to natural resources and human health.

The Forest Service monitors the effects of pollution that may impair visibility, harm human health, injure trees and other plants, acidify or cause unnatural fertilization of streams and lakes, leach nutrients from soils, and degrade cultural resources, like archeological sites and historical buildings. Forest activities that can affect air quality such as prescribed burning, ski areas, and mining are also monitored to ensure compliance with air regulations for human health and to monitor possible impacts to natural resources.

Vision and Mission Statement

The Air Program envisions a healthy environment for current and future generations where natural processes can occur. We believe that:

  • the health of humans and ecosystems are inseparable;
  • clean air is essential; and
  • science is a foundation for taking action.

The Mission of the Air Program is to provide sound counsel on air quality issues to Forest Service decision makers.

Image Credits: Image used on this site are taken from the Wilderness.net image library. Individual credits include: Peter Druschke, Russ Finley, Tom Iraci, Tom Kaffine, C.S. Kvern, Michael Olwyler, Steve Peel, Nick Teague, Josh Whitmore.


Forest Service Home
 
Air Resource Management Home
About Air Resource Management
Technical and Program
Information
Class I Wilderness Areas
   
   

Evaluate Our Service
We welcome your
feedback about service
you received in order to
improve our customer
service.

Egov: My Government. My Terms. The President's E-government Initiatives.

FirstGov.gov: The United States Government's Official Web Portal.

   

USDA Forest Service
1400 Independence Avenue SW
Washington, D.C.
20250-0003
(202) 205-8333

[graphic] USDA logo, which links to the department's national site. [graphic] Forest Service logo, which links to the agency's national site. [graphic] A link to the US Forest Service home page.