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Pollution-eating islands: the latest farming tool

By | February 19, 2013, 9:01 AM PST

Every year, polluted water traveling along the Mississippi River makes its way into the Gulf of Mexico, where it wreaks havoc on ocean life creating a dead zone thousands of square miles in size.

A major culprit is crop fertilizer, which runs off of farm fields and into ditches, streams and eventually into the Mississippi River. Environmentalists want stricter regulations to curb the problem and last year sued the U.S. EPA for its failure to set state pollution standards for nitrogen and phosphorus runoff.

The farming industry, worried about new, stricter regulations, is leaning toward a different solution: pollution-eating islands that could process nutrients before they reach the Mississippi, reported the New York Times.

Floating Islands International, a company based in Shepherd, Mont., has developed floating islands made from recycled plastic bottles and seeded with native plants that can mimic the role wetlands once played. (Check out how the floating island develops over time by comparing the photos of the initial install and one taken at a later date.)

Bruce Kania, who founded the company, was compelled to find a solution to polluted water after his black dog jumped into a pond and came out red, according to the company. He turned to the peat bogs in Northern Wisconsin–floating islands known for the abundance of fish that surround them–for inspiration.

Kania and his partners developed BioHaven, a floating island made of recycled plastic drink bottles capable of supporting the weight of plants and soil. The manmade islands biomimic natural floating islands to create a “concentrated” wetland effect.

The islands create a natural habitat for birds. But the real magic of the islands are what lies underneath. The islands have dense fibers and porous texture, the perfect material for growing large amount of microbes–in the form of biofilm–in a short amount of time, according to the company’s website. The biofilm cleans the water and turns the unwanted nutrients into fish food.

The company launched its floating island prototype in 2005. Since then, more than 4,000 islands have been installed in the U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, UK, Korea and Europe.

The islands are now being used for habitat restoration, wetland and lake restoration, water quality and as wave breakers.

Photos: Floating Island International

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Kirsten Korosec

About Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec

Contributing Editor

Kirsten Korosec has written for Technology Review, Marketing News, The Hill, BNET and Bloomberg News. She holds a degree from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. She is based in Tucson, Arizona.

Follow her on Twitter.

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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The government creates the problem. The people pay for the solution.
Suspiciously those manmade islands look like native wetlands. They are using a manmade fix for a manmade problem.

What most people fail to realize is that all of the alleged flood control measures built along the Mississippi River and others had one unintended consequence.

They destroyed the natural flood plains and wet lands that would have naturally managed the runoff environmentalists are now mad about.

I suspect a far more affordable long term solution would be to restore the native flood plains and wet lands. Of course that would mean ripping down thousands of miles of levees and moving millions of people.

So lets keep putting band aids like this on the problem.
Posted by Hates Idiots
19th Feb
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Dear Hates Idiots, who ever you are,
Please don't make the common mistake that when the Government takes "action," the goal is to benefit the People (or the environment.)
Most of the time Government action is to satisfy the interests of US Chamber of Commerce types or other business lobbyists who own the elected officials, the agency heads (especially under Republican administrations,) and regulators.
Posted by affordablecomputerguy@...
19th Feb
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Noted.
Please also note that plenty of it goes on under democrats too. That is why I used the party agnostic GOVERNMENT label.

One must remove your party filters to see the pure politics behind much of the wasteful spending in government.

Everyone, the elected and the bureaucrats, have their hands in our wallets for their own good. Not ours.

To buy into the political rhetoric is to allow ones self to be distracted from the bigger problems they do not want you to see.

The ruling class and their friends (elected, bureaucrats and crony capitalist alike) are getting richer while the rest of us are getting poorer.

With the collapse of the middle class the US and the middle class of much of western society, we are slipping into the socialist state class model of the old USSR.

The wealthy ruling class and the poor ruled class.
Posted by Hates Idiots
Updated - 19th Mar
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