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POLLUTION IMPACTS ON MARINE MAMMALS Kyra Jean Cipolla April 20th 2017 ESS 215 OVERVIEW • Direct effects of pollutants on marine mammals • Cetaceans (whales, dolphins, porpoises) • Pinnipeds (seals, walruses, sea lions) • Indirect effects of pollutants on marine mammals PURPOSE • Marine mammals are facing challenges posed by human activities • caused marine mammal mortality • The purpose is to identify what pollutants effect cetaceans and pinnipeds and how these effects threaten the lives of marine mammals across the globe. DIRECT EFFECTS ON CETACEANS: WHALES • Humpback Whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) and pollutant exposure • polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), hexachlorobenzene (HCB), hexachlorocyclohexanes (HCHs), DDT and its metabolites (like DDE), & more • All samples had exposure to the pollutants that they measured • DDT and PCBs had the most significant presence in sampling = immune system depression • Males displayed significantly higher concentrations compared to females. • off-load contaminants to their offspring during pregnancy. • Long-range transport of POPs is the main reason for the introduction of these chemicals to Antarctica. • Feeding in summer DIRECT EFFECTS ON CETACEANS: WHALES • Beluga Whales and PCBs, DDT, mercury and lead exposure • Study in St. Lawrence estuary • Exposure had adverse effects on different aspects of the normal physiology of beluga whales • Functional and morphological changes in thyroid gland and adrenal cortex DIRECT EFFECTS ON CETACEANS: DOLPHINS • Pacific Killer Whales, Orcinus orca, and PCB exposure • Study in British Columbia • resident (North and South) and transient killer whales • PCBs have caused reproductive impairment, skeletal abnormalities, immunotoxicity and endocrine disruption • Males become increasingly contaminated as they grow older, while females offload contaminants to their offspring during pregnancy and lactation • Marine mammal-eating transient killer whales were particularly contaminated with PCBs • with the southern residents, represent the most contaminated cetaceans studied in the world • This shows profiles of total Toxic Equivalents (TEQ 98) that suggest that PCBs present the greatest risk to killer whales • Graph shows that they surpass the toxicity threshold established for seals DIRECT EFFECTS ON CETACEANS: DOLPHINS • Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins and DDT and PCB exposure • Anthropogenic activities have resulted in the release of unprecedented amounts of POPs into the Pearl River Estuary, China during the last three decades which has exposed POPs to dolphins • hearing loss, infertility in males • Common dolphin (Delphinus delphis) & Fraser's dolphin (Lagenodelphis hosei) and POPs • POPs in the South Latin America: Bioaccumulation of DDT, PCB, HCB, HCH and Mirex in blubber • all samples had some organochlorine pesticides DIRECT EFFECTS ON PINNIPEDS • Northern Fur Seals and Organohalogen contamination • The POPs measured from blubber samples included PCB, DDT, chlorobenzenes, chlordanes, and mirex • Although many legacy POPs have been banned from use for decades, in general they have been slow to decline in top predators because of their persistent nature especially in the Arctic. • Pacific Walrus and toxic substance exposure • Pesticides, HCH, DDT as well as the heavy metals Cd, Pb, and Hg were found in samples • Cadmium, a heavy metal, and DDT found in all samples • Cd= liver damage INDIRECT EFFECTS • Effect of Nutrient Pollution on Marine Water Quality • Submarine groundwater discharge • Scientists found that the largest amount of macroalgae, low species diversity, and the highest concentrations of nitrogen in tissues of algae, coastal groundwater, and marine surface waters occurred in locations with anthropogenic activities • like sugarcane farms and wastewater injection wells CONCLUSION • Whales, dolphins, walruses, seals, and other marine mammals contaminated by pollutants • such as cancer, immune deficiency, reproductive abnormalities, and alterations in growth and development • Importance for humans to look at pollution threats to marine mammals • Alaskan natives rely on the northern fur seals harvests as part of their subsistence diet. • It is important from a human health perspective to consider the meat and blubber from the northern fur seals • risk associated with long-term exposure to pollutants present in whales and dolphins’ environment and might be a good model to predict health problems that could emerge in highly exposed human populations over time REFERENCES Amato DW, Bishop JM, Glenn CR, Dulai H, Smith CM. 2016. 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