The Sentinel-Record

‘Forever chemicals’ in deer, fish challenge hunters, tourism

- PATRICK WHITTLE

PORTLAND, Maine — Wildlife agencies in the U.S. are finding elevated levels of a class of toxic chemicals in game animals such as deer — and that’s prompting health advisories in some places where hunting and fishing are ways of life and key pieces of the economy.

Authoritie­s have detected the high levels of PFAS, or perand polyfluoro­alkyl substances, in deer in several states, including Michigan and Maine, where legions of hunters seek to bag a buck every fall. Sometimes called “forever chemicals” for their persistenc­e in the environmen­t, PFAS are industrial compounds used in numerous products, such as nonstick cookware and clothing.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency launched an effort last year to limit pollution from the chemicals, which are linked to health problems including cancer and low birth weight.

But discovery of the chemicals in wild animals hunted for sport and food represents a new challenge that some states have started to confront by issuing “do not eat” advisories for deer and fish and expanding testing for PFAS in them.

“The fact there is an additional threat to the wildlife — the game that people are going out to hunt and fish — is a threat to those industries, and how people think about hunting and fishing,” said Jennifer Hill, associate director of the Great Lakes Regional Center for the National Wildlife Federation.

PFAS chemicals are an increasing focus of public health and environmen­tal agencies, in part because they don’t degrade or do so slowly in the environmen­t and can remain in a person’s bloodstrea­m for life.

The chemicals get into the environmen­t through production of consumer goods and waste. They also have been used in firefighti­ng foam and in agricultur­e. Pfas-tainted sewage sludge has long been applied to fields as fertilizer and compost.

In Maine, where the chemicals were detected in well water at hundreds of times the federal health advisory level, legislator­s passed a law in 2021 requiring manufactur­ers to report their use of the chemicals and to phase them out by 2030. Environmen­tal health advocates have said Maine’s law could be a model for other states, some working on their own PFAS legislatio­n.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, signed a bill in September that bans the chemicals from cosmetics sold in the state. And more than 20 states have proposed or adopted limits for PFAS in drinking water, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

More testing will likely find the chemicals are present in other game animals besides deer, such as wild turkeys and fish, said David Trahan, executive director of the Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine, a hunting and outdoors advocacy group.

The discovery could have a negative impact on outdoor tourism in the short term, Trahan said. “If people are unwilling to hunt and fish, how are we going to manage those species?” he said. “You’re getting it in your water, you’re getting it in your food, you’re getting it in wild game.”

Maine was one of the first states to detect PFAS in deer. The state issued a “do not eat” advisory last year for deer harvested in the Fairfield area, about 80 miles north of Portland, after several of the animals tested positive for elevated levels.

The state is now expanding the testing to more animals across a wider area, said Nate Webb, wildlife division director at the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife. “Lab capacity has been challengin­g,” he said, “but I suspect there will be more facilities coming online to help ease that burden — in Maine and elsewhere in the country.”

Wisconsin has tested deer, ducks and geese for PFAS, and as a result issued a “do not eat” advisory for deer liver around Marinette, about 55 miles north of Green Bay. The state also asked fishermen to reduce consumptio­n of Lake Superior’s popular rainbow smelt to one meal per month.

Some chemicals, including PFAS, can accumulate in the liver over time because the organ filters the chemicals from the blood, Wisconsin’s natural resources department told hunters. New Hampshire authoritie­s have also issued an advisory to avoid consuming deer liver.

Michigan was the first state to assess PFAS in deer, said Tammy Newcomb, senior executive assistant director for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

The state issued its first “do not eat” advisory in 2018 for deer taken in and near Oscoda Township. Michigan has since issued an advisory against eating organs, such as liver and kidneys, from deer, fish or any other wild game anywhere in the state. It has also studied waterfowl throughout the state in areas of PFAS surface water contaminat­ion.

The state’s expanded testing also has proven beneficial because it helped authoritie­s find out which areas don’t have a PFAS problem, Newcomb said.

“People like to throw up their arms and say we can’t do anything about it. I like to point to our results and say that’s not true,” Newcomb said. “Finding PFAS as a contaminan­t of concern has been the exception and not the rule.”

The chemical has also been found in shellfish that are collected recreation­ally and commercial­ly. Scientists from the Florida Internatio­nal University Institute of Environmen­t sampled more than 150 oysters from around the state and detected PFAS in every one, according to their study in August. Natalia Soares Quinete, an assistant professor in the institute’s chemistry and biochemist­ry department, described the chemicals as “a long-term poison” that jeopardize­s human health.

Dr. Leo Trasande, a professor of pediatrics at NYU Grossman School of Medicine who has studied PFAS, said the best way to avoid negative health effects is reducing exposure. But Trasande said that’s difficult to do because the chemicals are so commonplac­e and long-lasting in the environmen­t.

“If you’re seeing it in humans, you’re likely going to see the effects in animals,” he said.

Wildlife authoritie­s have tried to inform hunters of the presence of PFAS in deer with posted signs in hunting areas as well as advisories on social media and the internet. One such sign, in Michigan, told hunters that high amounts of PFAS “may be found in deer and could be harmful to your health.”

Kip Adams, chief conservati­on officer for the National Deer Associatio­n, said the discovery of PFAS in states like Maine and Michigan is very concerning to hunters.

“With the amount of venison my family eats, I can’t imagine not being able to do that,” Adams said. “To this point, everything we’ve done has been about sharing informatio­n and making sure people are aware of it.”

 ?? (File Photo/ap/robert F. Bukaty) ?? A 10-point white-tailed deer walks through the woods Nov. 10, 2015, in Freeport, Maine.
(File Photo/ap/robert F. Bukaty) A 10-point white-tailed deer walks through the woods Nov. 10, 2015, in Freeport, Maine.
 ?? (File Photo/ap/carolyn Kaster) ?? Environmen­tal Protection Agency administra­tor Michael Regan speaks April 14 at North Carolina Agricultur­al and Technical State University in Greensboro, N.C.
(File Photo/ap/carolyn Kaster) Environmen­tal Protection Agency administra­tor Michael Regan speaks April 14 at North Carolina Agricultur­al and Technical State University in Greensboro, N.C.
 ?? (File Photo/ap/brian Witte) ?? People dredge for oysters Nov. 19, 2019, on the Chesapeake Bay in southern Maryland near Ridge, Md. “Forever chemicals” have been found in shellfish that are collected recreation­ally and commercial­ly.
(File Photo/ap/brian Witte) People dredge for oysters Nov. 19, 2019, on the Chesapeake Bay in southern Maryland near Ridge, Md. “Forever chemicals” have been found in shellfish that are collected recreation­ally and commercial­ly.
 ?? (File Photo/ap/national Wildlife Federation/drew Youngedyke) ?? This photo provided by the National Wildlife Federation shows a sign warning hunters not to eat deer because of high amounts of toxic chemicals in their meat in Oscoda, Mich.
(File Photo/ap/national Wildlife Federation/drew Youngedyke) This photo provided by the National Wildlife Federation shows a sign warning hunters not to eat deer because of high amounts of toxic chemicals in their meat in Oscoda, Mich.

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