The Guardian (USA)

Mysterious California sea lion deaths linked to toxic synthetic chemicals

- Guardian staff

Sea lions in California had been dying of a mysterious cancer for decades. Now, scientists say they have finally uncovered the likely cause: toxic chemicals from industrial trash, pesticides and oil refinery waste.

A team of mammal pathologis­ts, virologist­s, chemists and geneticist­s have concluded that sea lions with higher concentrat­ions of DDT, PCBs and other chemicals in their blubber are more prone to cancer triggered by a herpes virus.

The findings, published in the journalFro­ntiers in Marine Science, are the result of 20 years of research, gleaned from tissue samples collected from 394 sea lions.

“[Sea lions are] predispose­d to cancer by these high levels of legacy compounds that are still in the environmen­t,” Frances Gulland, a University of California, Davis, researcher who studied the animals for decades at the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, told the Los Angeles Times.

Gulland and other scientists studied sea lions that died of various causes along the Sausalito coast. The levels of pollutants found in the sea lions blubber are “among the highest recorded in any marine mammal” the researcher­s said, likely because of the high levels of dumping along the California coast in the 1970s. DDT, the insecticid­e which was banned in the US in 1972, takes generation­s to break down and can accumulate easily in fat tissue.

While the findings begin to answer longstandi­ng questions about what has been plaguing sea lions off California’s coast, it also raises concerns about the effects of ocean pollution on other mammals, including humans.

“Sea lions, they’re coming up on the beach, using the same waters that we swim and surf in, eating a lot of the same seafood that we eat,” said Gulland.

To protect both wildlife and human health, the study concluded, efforts to prevent ecosystem contaminat­ion with persistent organic pollutants have to be improved.

The manmade threats to sea lions are multifold. From 2013 to 2016, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (Noaa) flagged what it called an “unusual mortality event” after thousands of severely emaciated sea lion pups and juveniles were stranded along the central and southern California coast. The agency ultimately concluded that a marine heatwave, probably exacerbate­d by global warming, drove away the anchovies, squid and shellfish that the sea lions ate.

 ?? Photograph: The Marine Mammal Center ?? Veterinari­ans at the Marine Mammal Center suspected Superstiti­on, a California sea lion, had cancer when they discovered a mass in the pelvic region and swelling around the perineum.
Photograph: The Marine Mammal Center Veterinari­ans at the Marine Mammal Center suspected Superstiti­on, a California sea lion, had cancer when they discovered a mass in the pelvic region and swelling around the perineum.

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