| The Effects of Ocean
Pollution on Marine Mammals
By Bob Bohle
The impact of humans has now reached every square mile of
Earth’s oceans, and implications are ominous for ocean
creatures and humans alike. In a study released in the February
2008 journal Science, researchers found that human activity
-- from over-fishing to greenhouse gases and global warming
to the introduction of toxins into the environment – has
affected every square mile of ocean on the planet and strongly
impacted roughly 40 percent of marine ecosystems.
What the
study didn’t cover directly may be even more disturbing:
marine mammals are suffering dramatic rises in devastating
illnesses, such as nervous and digestive system problems,
liver disease, contaminant-induced immunosuppression, endocrine
system damage, reproductive malformations, and growth and
development issues. Worse yet is the alarming growth in cancer
cases. Many scientists around the world believe these illnesses
are being caused by contamination of the ocean with man-made
toxic chemicals.
Because marine mammals are at the top of
their food chain, the toxins in their food sources accumulates
in their bodies, especially in their fatty tissues and breast
milk. Toxins in plankton are consumed by small fish, which
are in turn eaten by larger fish, which are eaten by even
larger fish. Eventually marine mammals and humans, each higher
up the food chain, eat the now-toxic fish, further concentrating
the toxins. This bio-concentration is what causes high levels
of toxins in dolphins, whales, and other marine mammals.
Nine of the 10 species with the highest polychlorinated biphenyl
(PCB) levels are marine mammals.
The Toxic Top Ten: bottlenose
dolphin, orca. Risso’s dolphin, harbor seal, beluga,
Mediterranean monk seal, common dolphin, gray seal, polar
bear. The 10th is the Steller’s sea eagle.
The declining
health of ocean-going mammals, especially the increase in
various cancers, sends an undeniable message to humans. Thus
dolphins and other marine mammals are showing us our future – unless
we change our ways.
Marine mammals are sending an unambiguous
message to humankind: clean up the toxic soup we live next
to, swim in, and draw fish from, or pay a very high price
in human lives.
The Ocean Environment
Scientists have been
finding higher and higher levels of man-made chemicals in
marine mammal bodies, which have corresponded with increases
in mass die-offs, otherwise inexplicable population declines
and strandings. They have found that many of these events
are associated with immune system dysfunction, suggestive
of broad environmental distress in the oceans.
How have the
entire planet’s oceans become so contaminated? Environmental
toxins are spread by wind, rain and currents. Thus, the toxic
waste of one area, such as the United States and now Asia,
where industrialized development and contamination are growing
rapidly, become the toxic problems of the world. Persistent
Organic Pollutants, or POPs remain in the environment for
decades, even centuries. POPs resist environmental breakdown
via biological, chemical and photolytic processes, some taking
as long as a century to degrade to a safe level.
Even if
we totally banned the use of POPs tomorrow, the health problems
they cause would remain for many generations.
Today new contaminants
are a growing problem in marine eco-systems. Polybrominated
diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are flame retardants used in 85 percent
of commercial plastics, foam and textiles. We are surrounded
by them. They are found in computers, television sets, cars,
furniture fabrics, foam mattresses, and indoor dust.
PBDE
concentrations are doubling every four years in marine mammals,
according to one study. They are similar in chemical structure
to PCBs and are particularly found in very high levels world-wide
in harbor seal pups. PBDEs cause endocrine disruption and
developmental defects and, like many other POPs, can cause
cancer in animals and humans, according to the Environmental
Working Group, which studies San Francisco Bay.
PBDE levels
between 1997 and 2003 more than tripled in striped bass and
more than doubled in halibut in San Francisco Bay. The fish
are large and mobile, and are good indicators of the increasing
levels of toxins in the Bay. PBDEs were banned in Europe
in 2004/2005. They have not been banned in the U.S. California
banned two forms of the fire retardants chemicals known to
accumulate in the blood of mothers and nursing babies. Two
other states, Washington and Maine, have also banned PBDEs.
Bans were proposed last year in California, Connecticut,
New York, Hawaii, Illinois, and Montana.
PBDEs have been
escaping into the environment for years, and are rapidly
becoming a major marine health issue. Despite this fact,
they are not among the 12 chemicals being considered for
reduction of use or elimination by a United Nations treaty.
Beluga Whales
The beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas)
of the St. Lawrence Seaway and Estuary have had the dubious
honor of being the "most toxic mammal" in the western
hemisphere. Beluga carcasses are so saturated with agricultural
runoff-delivered chemicals, such as pesticides, herbicides
and phosphorus, that their carcasses must be handled like
toxic waste.
The SLE belugas also suffer from polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which are involved with the
etiology of cancer. Among several kinds of cancer observed
in these belugas is cancer of the proximal intestine, a rare
form in all species, including humans. But it is frequently
seen in species exposed to 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic, commonly
known as 2,4-D, an herbicide used to control broadleaf weeds.
According to researcher Daniel Martineau, the rate of cancer
among these belugas is higher than in any population of wild
terrestrial or aquatic animals. As a comparison, a study
of 50 belugas examined in the Canadian Arctic found no cancers.
Orcas (Killer Whales)
A 22-year-old female orca (Orcinus
orca), or killer whale, was found dead on Washington's Olympic
peninsula, and her PCB level was so high, technically the
carcass was toxic waste. The PCBs probably came from an earlier
dredging in the late 1990s of the harbor in Seattle, which
sent out a plume of PCB-laced sediment. Two years prior to
this disturbing discovery, PCB levels averaged 58 parts of
PCB per million of fat in dead orcas found by scientists.
This particular orca had roughly 1,000 ppm.
High toxin levels
throughout its habitat have dropped the average life expectancy
for a male orca more than in half, according to Ken Balcomb
of the Center for Whale Research in Friday Harbor, WA. Some
orca calfs don’t even make it at all: typically, the
first calf born to a female dies, because the mother passes
on much of her accumulated contaminants to that first calf
through her breast milk. Subsequent calfs, however, fare
better because the mother’s toxin levels have been
lowered.
A 2007 study found that the effects of PCB contamination
in Pacific Northwest orcas will last to at least 2030 for
the northern population of 230 animals. The southern population
of 85 may face risks until 2063. PCBs make whales more vulnerable
to infectious diseases, and impede normal growth and development.
Also, POPs impair reproduction because they are estrogen
imitators and cause low sperm counts. Because of the “persistent” nature
of the contaminants known collectively as POPs, we need to
take action immediately. The toxins that have quickly and
quietly impacted the health of marine mammals, our sentinels,
are in all of us. |