Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Report: Toxins Found in Whales Bode Ill for Humans
AGADIR, Morocco - Sperm whales feeding even in the most remote reaches of Earth's oceans have built up stunningly high levels of toxic and heavy metals, according to American scientists who say the findings spell danger not only for marine life but for the millions of humans who depend on seafood.
This undated photo provided by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts shows a sperm whale. Sperm whales feeding even in the most remote reaches of Earth's oceans have built up stunningly high levels of toxic and heavy metals. A report released Thursday noted high levels of cadmium, aluminum, chromium, lead, silver, mercury and titanium in tissue samples taken by dart gun from nearly 1,000 whales over five years. From polar areas to equatorial waters, the whales ingested pollutants that may have been produced by humans thousands of miles away, the researchers said.
"These contaminants, I think, are threatening the human food supply. They certainly are threatening the whales and the other animals that live in the ocean," said biologist Roger Payne, founder and president of Ocean Alliance, the research and conservation group that produced the report.
The researchers found mercury as high as 16 parts per million in the whales. Fish high in mercury such as shark and swordfish - the types health experts warn children and pregnant women to avoid - typically have levels of about 1 part per million.
The whales studied averaged 2.4 parts of mercury per million, but the report's authors said their internal organs probably had much higher levels than the skin samples contained.
"The entire ocean life is just loaded with a series of contaminants, most of which have been released by human beings," Payne said in an interview on the sidelines of the International Whaling Commission's annual meeting.
Payne said sperm whales, which occupy the top of the food chain, absorb the contaminants and pass them on to the next generation when a female nurses her calf. "What she's actually doing is dumping her lifetime accumulation of that fat-soluble stuff into her baby," he said, and each generation passes on more to the next.
Ultimately, he said, the contaminants could jeopardize seafood, a primary source of animal protein for 1 billion people.
"You could make a fairly tight argument to say that it is the single greatest health threat that has ever faced the human species. I suspect this will shorten lives, if it turns out that this is what's going on," he said.
Payne called his group's $5 million project the most comprehensive report ever done on ocean pollutants.
U.S. Whaling Commissioner Monica Medina informed the 88 member nations of the whaling commission of the report and urged the commission to conduct further research.
The report "is right on target" for raising issues critical to humans as well as whales, Medina told The Associated Press. "We need to know much more about these problems."
Payne, 75, is best known for his 1968 discovery and recordings of songs by humpback whales, and for finding that some whale species can communicate with each other over thousands of miles.
The 93-foot Odyssey, a sail-and-motor ketch, set out in March 2000 from San Diego to document the oceans' health, collecting pencil-eraser-sized samples using a dart gun that barely made the whales flinch.
After more than five years and 87,000 miles, samples had been taken from 955 whales. The samples were sent for analysis to marine toxicologist John Wise at the University of Southern Maine. DNA was compared to ensure the animals were not tested more than once.
Payne said the original objective of the voyage was to measure chemicals known as persistent organic pollutants, and the study of metals was an afterthought.
The researchers were stunned with the results. "That's where the shocking, sort of jaw-dropping concentrations exist," Payne said.
Though it was impossible to know where the whales had been, Payne said the contamination was embedded in the blubber of males formed in the frigid polar regions, indicating that the animals had ingested the metals far from where they were emitted.
"When you're working with a synthetic chemical which never existed in nature before and you find it in a whale which came from the Arctic or Antarctic, it tells you that was made by people and it got into the whale," he said.
How that happened is unclear, but the contaminants likely were carried by wind or ocean currents, or were eaten by the sperm whales' prey.
Sperm whales are toothed whales that eat all kinds of fish, even sharks. Dozens have been taken by whaling ships in the past decade. Most of the whales hunted by the whaling countries of Japan, Norway and Iceland are minke whales, which are baleen whales that feed largely on tiny krill.
Chromium, an industrial pollutant that causes cancer in humans, was found in all but two of the 361 sperm whale samples that were tested for it. Those findings were published last year in the scientific journal Chemosphere.
"The biggest surprise was chromium," Payne said. "That's an absolute shocker. Nobody was even looking for it."
The corrosion-resistant metal is used in stainless steel, paints, dyes and the tanning of leather. It can cause lung cancer in people who work in industries where it is commonly used, and was the focus of the California environmental lawsuit that gained fame in the movie "Erin Brockovich."
It was impossible to say from the samples whether any of the whales suffered diseases, but Wise found that the concentration of chromium found in whales was several times higher than the level required to kill healthy cells in a Petri dish, Payne said.
He said another surprise was the high concentrations of aluminum, which is used in packaging, cooking pots and water treatment. Its effects are unknown.
The consequences of the metals could be horrific for both whale and man, he said.
"I don't see any future for whale species except extinction," Payne said. "This is not on anybody's radar, no government's radar anywhere, and I think it should be."

31 Comments so far
Show AllMore accumulating evidence that industrial civilization/society was an evolutionary dead end. While it may have given us all some really neat toys, it's slowly killing us.
That whole back to the land, voluntary simplicity next to no technology movement is looking more and more like the only way we are going to survive as a species.
And *IF* we do survive (there are no guarantees we will), we will need new legends and mythology warning our descendants about the perils of advanced technology, capitalism, and greed.
Non Serviam - I will not serve.
So sad about the whales. And our grandchildren, all of them. We are leaving whales, frogs, bees, humans, a world filled with toxins, poverty and war. This is a tragedy.
Perhaps something can be saved if we stop right now. What we are doing is not sustainable. War is one obvious ruinous thing that we can refuse to support. It would be all good. The pursuit of oil is another, although we have to figure out how to heat our homes and transport ourselves in new ways.
Toxins in whales tissues in the remotest parts of the earth. What is in mother's milk?
Joe
"What is in mother's milk?"
Lots of crap. Wish i had the citations for you, but i suspect you can find them, if you look.
How interesting that the "deficit hawks" are warning about the dire consequences to future generations of national debt, but not uttering a peep about the consequences to them of turning their parents into toxic soup .....
Mother Nature doesn't follow the Golden Rule, she does unto others as is done unto her. Nothing personal, just karma .....
What goes around always comes around ....
hey, aquifer!
your post reminded me:
there is no national debt, if we agree to such...
these economics are all fabricated...
we could, all of us, simply stop...if we chose...
Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...unanimous, planetwide rejection of the modern, industrial world...we just turn it all off...
peace to you!
What is in mother's milk?
Whatever is in mother's food, drink, medicines, the air she breathes and whatever get onto her skin.
Humans are too dangerous and toxic to live on Earth. 7 billion humans is far above lethal dose levels for the planet.
Western civilization's people, not indigenous peoples, are not very smart for they have managed to destroy the web that feeds them but also for the rest of human and non human kind. Plainly, a result of not realizing their connection to the web and no where else is it as extreme as in the USA with its cult of individuality and accumulation of wealth.
I became aware of the poor man who was a volunteer in the gulf, who comitted suicide yesterday. I guess he had to kill off a body which served no purpose. His soul and life force had been murdered by the new world orderbots. aghh.
Is all that we see or seem...but a dream within a dream...
They said two died that day....Haven't
heard a peep about the second who died,
just the charter boat captian, have you heard
how the second died???
Yes, and technology should have stopped with the bow and arrow. I believe our goal on Earth is to enjoy life fully and respect all living things. Not to see how many humans we can fit on Spaceship Earth or how deep we can drill into Mother Earth's veins.
Add Corexit (constituent chemicals kept secret by Behemoth
Polluter) to the menu.
It reminds me of how saddened and angered
I was when I heard about Bill Clinton's little
note he left in the shit house.
"It's the eCONomy stupid."
When all along it has been
"It's the ecology stupid."
In the sixties and thur the Carter Administrion
ecology was in the vocabulary of Americans, then
in the eighties and until today that word was dropped
in favor of economy.
Now, because of this, we will see what it is like
to eat , drink, and breathe, our SUVs, oil , and
cell phones.
"In 1970, when Charles Reich's book, "The Greening of America", was published, I thought we had reached a significant turning point and we were well on the way to environmental healing." -- Visiting Professor
I thought exactly the same thing! I remember people taking the environment seriously, and conservation of energy, too. Most people I knew, at that time, insulated their houses, etc., turned their heat down, and their air conditioning up, and no one I knew was laughing at any of these ideas. I will add that I was, in 1970, living in a very conservative/Republican city -- Lincoln, NE.
As the whales go, so will we, who have dined
at the top of the food chain.
Feeding in every toxic ore ever mined,
And every chemical that went down the drain.
The piles of mine tailings that get washed away.
Pesticides and herbicides over the world we spray.
Will not just poison us, as deserved by natures fair play.
But every creature that lives on prey.
Our factories still dump into oceans yet more toxic waste stuff,
Leaching into the soil and water, or belching into air.
Creating new products for which we cannot have enough
Unregulated even at the source, its throwaway without care.
It will be soon time for us to go,
The rates of crisis accelarate.
Civilisation increases its throughput flow.
While the earth continues to degenerate.
I watch older movies, which end on a note of hope for the future, and cry when I realize they were made in a time when there was a future to look forward to.
"These contaminants, I think, are threatening the human food supply..."
I suppose scientists and writers have to point out that the same things that harm wild animals also threaten humans, in order to get humans to take notice.
The fact the most people don't appreciate that what harms animals also threatens humans indicates we aren't as intelligent as we like to think.
I'm so sick of humans fouling this living planet. It makes me more sad and upset than anything else people do. Much as it chagrins me to say this, the world would be better off without us.
The insatiable greed of the rich will be the death of us all. We are on a tiny lifeboat in a cold indifferent universe, and the idiot masses think some supernatural being is going to come and save "the chosen" and take them to paradise. Get real, fools. This IS paradise. At least it was, until the greedy screwed it up for us.
Yes, it's suicidal greed, but it's been made possible by right wing violence
-- and Congress which loved capitalism and industrial revolution.
Capitalism has existed despite all common sense --
and now capitalism exists despite its obvious fatal effects on the planet,
animal life and humanity!
Patriarchy, Organized Patriarchal Religion -- and its invention - Capialism
are all suicidal concepts.
Let's begin tackling overpopulation, as well, again -- we've been turned
around from that goal by religious fanatacism.
PS: Capitalism and Communism . . "a pox on both their houses!"
.
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
"This IS paradise. At least it was, until the greedy screwed it up for us."
You said it Thomas Arnold. Also those of us who are comfortable must put ourselves in with the greedy to some extent. Are we so in love with huge houses, huge cars, piles of electronic gadgets that we are willing to toxify our lifeboat? Are we too lazy to think about things and then lift a finger to take over from the pirates at the helm so that future generations can live? We may no longer have fish, but we can, as they say, become fishers of men (and women). ORGANIZE.
And even if you believe in a God, why then ruin the best stunning evidence of his or her love, the beautiful life-sustaining gift of the earth, which we as a race obviously do not treasure sufficiently? All of us were chosen just by being alive.
Joe
I often believe that the Adam and Eve myth to be an analogy for modern man. Adam and Eve were not kicked out of Eden; they remained and proceeded to trash it. Eden is Earth, and we lost it.
Justice at last! The whale eaters in Iceland, Norway, and Japan are ingesting plenty of heavy metals along with their favorite delicacy. Don't suppose they'll give up their disgusting habit now that it has shown to be a health threat. Probably not, but at least they will pay a price for thumbing their noses at Greenpeace and others.
my 16-year-old asked me the other day:
when will we get to the future?
he meant that fantasy future of flying spacecars and such...
I don't think we're ever going to see those things, I said...
I think we've seen the best we're going to see...
I then explained about this very subject, the chemical saturation we have dealt our environment at every turn, and the unavoidable changes those chemicals wreak at the cellular and atomic levels...
choice, like Elvis, has left the building...
The real tragedy, of course, is that even his question displays the underlying problem...
A constant tendency for man to see nature his own way, to wish to bring those changes about in spite of consequence, and to be unwilling to accept nature as the paradise it is...was...
even if that future were possible, it would be unwise to pursue such...
it is unwise...
we can still choose to reduce our impact in the closing days and years...stretch our twilight, if you will...
Eventually, all supposed benefits from eating seafood will be negated, if they haven't already. I will mostly try to stick with egg whites for protein. We already have a veggie farm. If the yield is good, we'll have enough to can and freeze for the winter.
Getting ready to build a small chicken coup for eggs. Used to eat tuna a lot, but not anymore. One other thing I'd like to learn how to do is make my own bread. Flower is something that can be stored. If more communities got together and farmed, they'd be healthier in so many ways--unless the gulf catastrophe really does put toxic compounds in our rain.
'for the millions of humans who depend on seafood'.........
we do not 'depend' on seafood...........
we are not carnivores..............
we can live on fruits and vegetables..............
and after bp has killed the seafood, that is what we will all have to do..................
That may very well be true but that is exactly why the Japanese want to conduct research by slaughtering a huge number of whales.
Mercury poisoning is pretty awfull. It causes neurologic disease as well. Stupid humans.
This country started with 75% of the original inhabitatants dying from the diseases brought here from the people that left the european continent. This shadow is still here and until you know the truth and learn from it there will be these clouds. I speak to the earth, it still has power and still tolerates our footsteps. There is a great sadness though.
I'm surprised that the article didn't mention old Mr "Clean Coal" as a suspect. The fallout in uranium and heavy metals from coal power plants is world wide. There is no escape from this dirty menace as it gets sucked up by convective weather, enters the jet stream and is transported over all the oceans. Currents take it from there.
A new coal power plant goes on line in China each week now.
But that's not the only hazard. The nuclear mafia has been dumping radioactive waste in the Med and off Somalia for at least 20 years. I've read accounts that whole ships are sunk off the long unpatrolled coast of that African nation with no functional government. It's safe to presume that the Triads in Asia are in that business in their part of the world; and many other nuclear and industrial plants take care of their toxic waste the same way.
Why is it, I wonder, we put our faith in government to protect us? Government is inherently corrupt, no matter how it is structured. It is up to the individual citizens to be actively engaged in government and industry and to demand resignations when FUBARS happen under their incompetent leader's watch.
Tj