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State of Environment Reporting
What
are the Contaminant Levels in Harbour Seals?
PCBs
in Harbour Seals

Dioxins
and Furans in Harbour Seals


SOURCE:
Ross, P.S. et al. 2001a. PCBs at the top of the food chain: geographical
variation in British Columbia and Washington harbour seals. Puget
Sound Research 2001 Bellevue, USA. Ross, P.S. et al. 2002. Spatial
fractionation of PCB, PCDD, and PCDF congeners in free-ranging harbour
seals (Phoca vitulina) from coastal British Columbia, Canada
and Washington State, USA. submitted. NOTES: At all sites, blubber
biopsy samples were taken from 4-6 week old free-ranging harbour
seal pups in good condition. Samples were pooled for Vancouver due
to a limited sample size. As a result, the location reflects the
site where most samples were obtained, while extra samples were
collected in adjacent areas.
What
are the contaminant levels in Harbour Seals?
- Harbour
seals are good indicators of the contaminant
level in coastal food chains because they
are at the top of the food chain and spend
most of their time in the same place.
- Harbour
seals in the Strait of Georgia showed
higher levels of dioxins and furans than
those in Puget Sound. PCB levels, however,
were more than seven times higher in Puget
Sound seals.
- The
PCB levels found in Puget sound seals
are similar to levels that have been found
to suppress the immune systems of seals
and other marine mammals, leaving them
more susceptible to disease.
- Although
certain chemicals are banned from use
in Canada they are still used in other
countries. These chemicals can evaporate
easily in hot climates and get carried
by wind currents (atmospheric transport)
to colder regions, such as mountains in
British Columbia and the Canadian Arctic,
where they condense.
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