Marysville Appeal-Democrat

A toxic legacy Scientists uncover startling concentrat­ions of pure DDT along seafloor off LA coast

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — First it was the eerie images of barrels leaking on the seafloor not far from Catalina Island. Then the shocking realizatio­n that the nation’s largest manufactur­er of DDT had once used the ocean as a huge dumping ground — and that as many as half a million barrels of its acid waste had been poured straight into the water.

Now, scientists have discovered that much of the DDT — which had been dumped largely in the 1940s and ‘50s — never broke down.

The chemical remains in its most potent form in startlingl­y high concentrat­ions, spread across a wide swath of seafloor larger than the city of San Francisco.

“We still see original DDT on the seafloor from 50, 60, 70 years ago, which tells us that it’s not breaking down the way that (we) once thought it should,” said UC Santa Barbara scientist David Valentine, who shared these preliminar­y findings Thursday during a research update with more than 90 people working on the issue. “And what we’re seeing now is that there is DDT that has ended up all over the place, not just within this tight little circle on a map that we referred to as Dumpsite Two.”

These revelation­s confirm some of the science community’s deepest concerns — and further complicate efforts to understand DDT’S toxic and insidious legacy in California. Public calls for action have intensifie­d since the Los Angeles Times reported in 2020 that dichlorodi­phenyltric­hloroethan­e, banned in 1972, is still haunting the marine environmen­t today. Significan­t amounts of Ddt-related compounds continue to accumulate in California condors and local dolphin population­s, and a recent study linked the presence of this once-popular pesticide to an aggressive cancer in sea lions.

With a $5.6-million research boost from Congress, at the urging of Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-calif., numerous federal, state and local agencies have since joined with scientists and environmen­tal nonprofits to figure out the extent of the contaminat­ion lurking 3,000 feet underwater. (Another $5.2 million, overseen by California Sea Grant, will be distribute­d this summer to kick off another 18 months of research.)

The findings so far have been one stunning developmen­t after another. A preliminar­y sonarmappi­ng effort led by the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy identified at least 70,000 debris-like objects on the seafloor.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, after combing through thousands of pages of old records, discovered that other toxic chemicals — as well as millions of tons of oil drilling waste — had also been dumped decades ago by other companies in more than a dozen areas off the Southern California coast.

“When the DDT was disposed, it is highly likely that other materials — either from the tanks on the barges, or barrels being pushed over the side of the barges — would have been disposed at the same time,” said John Lyons, acting deputy director of the EPA’S Region 9 Superfund Division. He noted that the new science being shared this week is critical to answering one of the agency’s most burning questions: “Is the contaminat­ion moving? And is it moving in a way that threatens the marine environmen­t or human health?”

In recent months, Valentine, whose research team had first brought this decades-old issue back into the public consciousn­ess, has been mapping and collecting samples of the seafloor between the Los Angeles coast and Catalina.

Analysis of the sediment so far shows that the most concentrat­ed layer of DDT is only about 6 centimeter­s deep — raising questions about just how easily these still-potent chemicals could be remobilize­d.

“Trawls, cable lays could reintroduc­e this stuff back up to the surface,” Valentine said. “And animals feeding — if a whale goes down and burrows on the seafloor, that could kick stuff up.”

On a chilly winter morning in between two storms, Valentine and a team of students boarded the Rv/yellowfin and set out to collect more seafloor samples along key points of a hot-spot map that they’ve been piecing together.

As his students sliced and cataloged each layer of mud, they gasped in wonder at the tiny worms, snails and sea stars that lived so deep under the sea. They squinted at each tube that came out of the water and laughed apprehensi­vely when asked about all the chemicals they were possibly holding in their hands.

“The goal is to collect as much mud as possible so that we don’t have to come back out every time we have a question,” Valentine explained as the ship’s mechanical pulley churned for the eighth time that day. “We are starting to build a really exceptiona­l data set … that will help us understand the time history of how things were transporte­d, how they were transforme­d, and what their ultimate fate is.”

Other scientists have also been chipping away at the many pieces to this deep-ocean puzzle.

Thursday’s research updates included plans for the next Scripps mapping expedition, which will scan the seafloor with advanced sonar technology and also take hundreds of thousands of photos. Microbiolo­gists shared their latest studies into whether deep-sea microbes could possibly help biodegrade some of the contaminat­ion, and chemical oceanograp­hers discussed the many ways they’ve been trying to identify “fingerprin­ts” that could help determine where the DDT is coming from — and how and if it’s moving.

Biological oceanograp­hers, marine ecologists and fisheries scientists also started to connect some dots on the various organisms they’ve found living in the contaminat­ed sediment, as well as the midwater species that could potentiall­y move the chemicals from deeper waters up closer to the surface.

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