[Pharmwaste] Gender-Bending LA Fish Raise Ocean Pollution Concerns

Tenace, Laurie Laurie.Tenace at dep.state.fl.us
Fri Dec 2 11:10:36 EST 2005


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000085&sid=aMxx.iJFnv2k&refer=europe


Gender-Bending Los Angeles Fish Raise Ocean Pollution Concerns 
Dec. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Male fish living near sewer pipes in Los Angeles's
coastal waters are developing female sex organs, renewing concern that
contaminants dumped in the ocean 30 years ago pose health risks. 

The gender bending, the first time observed in ocean fish, was discovered by
the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project in May. Eleven of 64
bottom-dwelling fish caught near sewage pipes from Santa Monica to Huntington
Beach had ovary tissue in their testes, according to a study by the group. 

DDT, a pesticide banned in the U.S. 30 years ago, may be causing the
abnormalities, said Dan Schlenk, an aquatic ecotoxicologist at the University
of California in Riverside and co-author of two of three papers on the Los
Angeles-area fish. The studies are a reminder to local residents that
consuming fish from the Santa Monica Bay may pose health risks. 

``If a friend came back from fishing and offered me a fish from his boat,
yeah I would eat it, but I wouldn't do it on a regular basis,'' said Matt
Stein, chief seafood officer at King's Seafood Co., owner of Ocean Avenue
Seafood in Santa Monica California. ``Whether it's the mercury in the water
or DDT, it's all about moderation.'' 

Los Angeles sewers that drain into the Santa Monica Bay, which stretches from
Point Dume in the north to the Palos Verdes peninsula in the south, served as
a dumping ground for DDT, dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane, starting in the
1950s. 

Pollution 

In 2000, companies including Montrose Chemical Corp. of California, Aventis
CropScience USA, Chris-Craft Industries Inc. and Atkemix Thirty-Seven Inc.
agreed to a $73 million settlement with California and U.S. prosecutors to
clean up ocean contamination around Los Angeles, the Environmental Protection
Agency said on its Web site. 

In a 1994 report, the U.S. Geological Survey identified elevated levels of
DDT and PCBs in a 17 square-mile area around Palos Verdes, which lies about
20 miles south of downtown. Eating fish contaminated by chemicals such as DDT
and PCBs, polychlorinated biphenyls, can increase cancer risk, harm the liver
and affect the central nervous system, the EPA said. 

The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment currently has
consumption warnings for species including white croaker, corbina, sculpin,
rock fish and kelp bass, primarily due to concerns about DDT and PCBs in the
Los Angeles area, department spokesman Allan Hirsch said. 

Estrogen 

DDT mimics estrogen in its effects on some animals, possibly causing the
development of female characteristics in male hornyhead turbots and English
sole, according to the study by the Southern California Coastal Water
Research Project. Other so- called estrogenic compounds that may cause female
traits may also be found in sunscreen, Schlenk said. 

``The most significant aspect of this study is that it's the first time that
we have found these kind of symptoms in salt water fish,'' said Steve
Weissberg, director at the Southern California Coastal Water Research
Institute. 

The studies, which will be followed by more research, don't address human
health risks, Schlenk said. Some studies have linked hormone-mimicking
chemicals to decreased sperm counts, altered genitalia in baby boys and
premature puberty in girls. 

``Exposure to DDTs and other persistent contaminants that show estrogenic
activity can occur through dietary consumption of fish,'' Schlenk said. ``The
relative risk of adverse effects depends on the dose.'' 

Treatment 

While the government has banned dumping toxic chemicals into sewers, the
practice left ocean outflow sites contaminated. Los Angeles County and city
together process about 650 million gallons of waste water a day, the
third-largest output in the U.S. behind Chicago and New York City. 

The county's 11 treatment plants don't filter out all potentially harmful
chemicals. 

``There are some natural contaminants that treatment plants may not catch
completely such as tannins,'' said Bob Horvath, head of Technical Services at
the Los Angeles County Sanitation District. ``These studies can't look at all
of them so they focus on key things, like hormones.'' 

The biggest source of ocean pollution in Los Angeles, which has a population
3.7 million, is rain runoff from city streets, said Hirsch of the state
environment office. 

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's plans for improving water quality include
revitalizing the Los Angeles River and improving catch basins for storm
water, said Nancy Sutley, deputy mayor for energy and the environment. The
mayor doesn't have a specific plan for addressing DDT and pesticide pollution
in the ocean, she said. 

Causation 

``The big picture for the few fish that are left is that they are slowly
being poisoned,'' said Gordon Labedz, conservation committee chair at the
local chapter of the Sierra Club. ``Whether it's from sewage plants or from
runoff. Our coastal ocean is at great risk in the long run.'' 

Local charter-boat fishermen and their clients often keep their catch for
dinner. Marina Del Rey Sportfishing hosts 20 to 40 customers a day, including
customers who have returned for 15 years. Their regular catch includes rock
cod, bass and halibut. 

``We've been eating fish from these waters for years,'' said Rick Arnold, 36,
who has worked at the company for 21 years and lives in Marina Del Rey. ``I
am 6'5 and 300 pounds. I eat our fish three times a week. I don't think
there's anything wrong with me.'' 


Laurie J. Tenace
Environmental Specialist
Florida Department of Environmental Protection
2600 Blair Stone Road, MS 4555
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-2400
PH: (850) 245-8759
FAX: (850) 245-8811
Laurie.Tenace at dep.state.fl.us
 
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