Top Banner
Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health
19

Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Dec 29, 2015

Download

Documents

Tamsyn Sanders
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health

Page 2: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Persistent Organic Pollutants

Chemicals and by-products generated through their production and use can be released to the environment, potentially impacting wildlife and humans.

Persistent organic pollutants or POPs, are long-lived in the environment and if bioavailable, they can make their way into animals and be stored in fat.

Examples include PCBs, DDT, dioxins

Page 3: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

POPs: Relevance to Human Health Interact with macromolecules within the body Impair or inhibit metabolic processes Induce mutations in DNA (mutagenic) May increase the risk of cancer by altering cellular

metabolism or damaging DNA directly (carcinogenic)

Impair reproduction Induce birth defects (teratogenic)

Page 4: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Journey of a Persistent Organic Pollutant

Page 5: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Chapter 6 follows a (PCB) molecule from its creation in a Monsanto chemical plant near Anniston, Alabama, to its entry into a polar bear in the Arctic.

This hypothetical journey may differ in detail from the movement of any specific molecule, but it describes in general the way one type of especially potent and persistent endocrine disrupting compound, the PCBs, have become ubiqutious contaminants in virtually every ecosystem on planet Earth.

http://www.pbs.org/tradesecrets/problem/toxic.html

Page 6: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Interactive: A Toxic Journey

http://www.pbs.org/tradesecrets/pcb/toxicjflash.html

Page 7: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

POPs in Polar Bears

Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program.

Page 8: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Inuit PeopleIn 1997, Inuit breast milk was discovered to contain seven times the amount of PCBs than the typical infant from the US or Southern Canada.

Page 9: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Bioaccumulation vs Biomagnification

Bioaccumulation Concentration of a pollutant within an organism Pollution of the human body begins before birth Body Burden refers to the amount of pollution

present in an organism Biomagnification

Concentration of a pollutant within a food chain PCBs, DDT, Mercury, Arsenic, Dioxin

Page 10: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

http://www.seathos.org/what-is-bio-magnification/

Page 11: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Biomagnification Activity

Primary Consumer

Tertiary Consumer

Secondary Consumer

Enter Number of PCBs acquired during activity

XX

XX

XX

Page 12: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

http://bio1152.nicerweb.com/Locked/media/ch55/biomagnification.html

Page 13: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Body Burden

http://quantifiedself.com/2008/01/monitoring-bodyburdens/

Page 14: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

On Contaminated Sediment

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that approximately 10 percent (over a billion cubic yards) of the sediment underlying our nation's surface water is sufficiently contaminated with pollutants to pose potential risks to fish and to humans and wildlife that eat fish.EPA’s Contaminated Sediment Management Strategy (1998)

http://water.epa.gov/polwaste/sediments/cs/upload/strategy.pdf

Page 15: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

http://www.egr.msu.edu/tosc/grandcal/factsheets/contaminated%20sediments.shtml

Page 16: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Bioavailability Bioavailability processes are the individual

physical, chemical, and biological interactions that determine the exposure of plants and animals to chemicals associated with soils and sediments.

These processes modify the amount of chemical in soil or sediment that is actually absorbed and available to cause a biological response.

National Research Council, 2003.

Page 17: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Research has shown that the bioavailability of many of these contaminants is less than the total amount of contaminant in the sediment.

Page 18: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

“The current regulatory paradigm for characterizing the level of contamination in soils and sediments generally does not include measures of the actual bioavailability of these contaminants to human or

ecological receptors.”

SERDP & ESTCP Expert Panel Workshop on Research & Development Needs for Understanding & Assessing the Bioavailability of Contaminants in Soils & Sediments (2008)

Page 19: Examining Bioaccumulation & Biomagnification: Implications for Ecosystems and Human Health.

Evaluating Risk

“Incorporating bioavailability considerations in the calculation of risk can:optimize the extent of cleanup required to be protective, improve site decision-making, and can be an important factor in balancing the risks caused by remedial action with the risks addressed by remedial action.”

Interstate Technology and Regulatory Council (ITRC)