Wales On Sunday

Pollution threat to the orca population

-

THE number of killer whales could be halved in a few decades due to pollutants in the seas, according to new research.

Steps to ban chemicals, known as polychlori­nated biphenyls (PCBs), were first made 40 years ago, but they remain a deadly threat to the mammals at the top of the food chain.

A new study, involving researcher­s at the University of St Andrews, shows that current concentrat­ions could severely deplete population­s of killer whales in the most heavily contaminat­ed areas within 30 to 50 years.

Professor Ailsa Hall, director of the Sea Mammal Research Unit, said: “In these contaminat­ed areas, we rarely observe newborn killer whales.”

Orcas are among the mammals with the highest level of PCBs in their blub- ber, with values as high as 1,300 milligrams per kilogram.

Animals with levels as low as 50 mg per kg can show signs of infertilit­y and immunity problems.

Researcher­s from St Andrews and Aarhus University in Denmark found the number of killer whales could rapidly decline in 10 of the 19 population­s.

They are particular­ly threatened in heavily contaminat­ed areas near Brazil, the Strait of Gibraltar, the west coast of the UK, and along the east coast of Greenland where they are affected due to high consumptio­n of seals.

In the oceans around the Faroe Islands, Iceland, Norway, Alaska and the Antarctic, the prospects are not so gloomy. Here, population­s are growing and forecasts predict they will continue to do so throughout the next century.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom