environmental toxicity Flashcards

1
Q

what are the main issues with environmental toxicology

A

in environmental a few species such as daphnia, bees, trout and quail are used to determine how millions of species and their inter relationships will pan out over time and space

dose response curves and LD50 are widely used

growing use of modelling techniques based on empirical and molecular approaches

the environment is too complex to model and predict outcomes sufficiently well for decision making

there will be exposure to not one but to many chemicals

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2
Q

what are factors effecting environmental toxicology

A

severity: the degree to which harm or damage is done (depends on sensitivity of species)
duration: how long the effects lasts for (could be decades or more)
extent: the geographical area over which the effect can be found (global impacts from local releases are possible)

release into the environment (point or multiple sources)

distribution in the environment (in which compartment)

metabolism in the environment (maybe in more than one compartment)

pathway from release to receptor (may involve movement through different compartments)

impact on one or more species (including food chain effects)

impact on an ecosystem process such as nutrient cycles or pH balances)

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3
Q

how is realistic information obtained

A

experimental systems to try to perform tests in as natural environment as possible

aquatic organisms can be amongst the most sensitive

tiered testing approaches (screening: lab centred and based on mortality, field studies over several years and everything in between)

other sources of information are reports such as UK environmental agency containing information such as contaminated land and water pollution

journals such as ecotoxicology, nature

books such as handbook of ecotoxicology

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4
Q

give some example impacts

A

organochlorine pesticides such as DDT causes eggshell thinning in some birds and dieldrin causes mortality in many species

metals such as lead (causes neurological problems), cadmium (kidney proximal tubule impacts in birds and mammals) and mercury (neurological ones but depends on chemical form)

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5
Q

how does DDT effect the environment

A

first use in naples in late 40s vs typhus outbreak

is an organochlorine pesticide

caused declines of birds of prey in USA and UK

causes thinner shells in nests

active compound was DDE, very persistent, fat soluble, accumulates along food chains

global distribution

only a few species very sensitive; especially birds of prey such as eagles and hawks since it accumulates along food chains

long experimental programme established impacts via shell formation

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6
Q

how did dieldrin effect the environment

A

very toxic, kill many species, not at all specific

fat soluble

persists as HEOD in the environment for many years

accumulates in food chains

killed adult birds of prey, DDT and dieldrin were in use at same time one as a spray the latter as a seed dressing so they interacted at the population level effecting breeding success and adult mortality rates- some species became near extinct in areas where used

recovery of bird of prey populations once DDE effects began to diminish and HEOD no longer entering environment

regulation took many years

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7
Q

how do metals affect the environment

A

lead:
shotgun pellets; a long lasting problem in aquatic areas, kills birds years later if water levels drop

fishing weights; killed swans in great numbers in the UK

pellets mistaken for grit by birds

cadmium:
accumulates in pelagic seabirds; damages kidneys but birds may be adapted

source still unknown; natrual, older plastics?

mercury:
inorganic; potentially harmless if excreted quickly enough

methyl and phenyl mercury compounds: methyl much more toxic than phenyl, methyl mercury is neurotoxin and may have other effects

sources may be natural (volcanic) as well as industrial e.g extraction of gold and commercial sources

methylmercury likely produced in anaerobic marine sediments

marine fish can accumulate high levels; if this is in animal feed then domesticated animals can die

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8
Q

how do PCBs effect the environment

A

many isomers (over 200)

is an industrial by-product

high levels in 15,000 seabirds that were found dead in irish sea in 1969

cause never definitively established

birds were moulting and in storm conditions had apparently starved

initiated a large international research programme and PCs were gradually withdrawn from use in electrical and heating appliances worldwide

co planar PCBs were the most toxic (a little dioxin like)

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9
Q

how do dioxins effect the environment

A

another complex group of chemicals

first came to public notice when a factory in seveso in italy exploded, dioxins were found to be widely distributed in the area

suggested to be very toxic but a weak evidence base only

a complex set of local circumstances involving people as well as wildlife and agricultural animals

led to the establishment of the seveso directive of the EU to prevent industrial accidents, an annex for what constitutes a major accident in relation to the environment

later the directive was revised and the annex on wildlife improved with firmer criteria

the directive deals with large industrial plants not just those that might release dioxins

dioxins are released in everyday activity such as firework displays where plastics are used in the firework casing (mostly PVC) can also be released by PVC fires (eg at recycling plants)

were also present in defoliants used in the vietnam war; blamed for many problems

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10
Q

polybrominated biphenyls

A

michigan USA

mystery deaths and morbidity in cattle

lead to large economic losses

PBBs similar to PCBs but just with a bromine replacing chlorine

mix up in plant (through bad labelling and illiterate worker) led to an industrial cattle feed line becoming contaminated with PBBs

took years to uncover true sequence of events and regulate appropriately

some farm businesses never recovered for range of reasons

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11
Q

how do organophosphorous compounds effect the environment

A

pesticides such as parathion and malathion

akin to nerve agents in many respects

can interact with one another and with other pesticides by blocking metabolic pathways

species differences in sensitivity (pink footed geese vs other geese)

less persistent than organochlorines

were often sprayed from the air

were often hand sprayed without protective equipment in asia which led to human deaths in several countries

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12
Q

how do organometals effect environment

A

tributyltin:
antifouling agent on boats

caused intersex in marine molluscs

complex research programme to establish which groups of boats were involved and which estuaries

the first of the endocrine disruptors; this word is widely used to regulate chemicals

alkyl lead:

widely used in petrol engine cars before 1990s; an anti-knock agent

produced by very few factories

killed several thousands of birds on the mersey estuary

experimental and environmental evidence used to find cause and then monitor improvement

many potential causes had to be whittled down to one

chemical did not behave as expected in environment

puzzle of why mortality event happened when it did
is a neurotoxin (worker mortalities were known), implications for human health in area due to wildfowling and local consumption

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13
Q

how does diclofenac effect the environment

A

is an anti inflammatory

limited use recommended in humans (short duration dosing regimes)

very cheap in india; used to keep cattle going

residues in carcasses taken up by scavenging vultures

bird kidneys and calcium metabolism more sensitive to diclofenac than mammalian systems, vultures particularly sensitive due to their ecological niche and feeding habitats

millions of vultures died, almost became extinct; human implications;

rabies from increased numbers of feral dogs, social and cultural issues; tower burials became very difficult as scavengers were missing, economic impact ran into 100s millions USD

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14
Q

how are neonicotinoids effect the e

A

neonicitinoids are an insecticide

standard tests can show effects on bees

regulatory best practice said that insects breed so fast that even if 50% mortality would be recovered in next breeding season

however what if next breeding season is interfered with

gathering field evidence took several years and was preceded by more general concerns about bee health declines and loss of bees from diseases or poor husbandry

mixed responses in different parts of the world to mounting evidence; lab and field evidence needed to be combined

eventually responses in different parts of the world to mounting evidence: lab and field evidence needed to be combined

eventually established that honey bees and bumble bees might well be suffering population level declines across the countryside

now banned in EU and UK

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15
Q

how does acid rain and eutrophication effect the environment

A

acid rain: sulphur
sulphur dioxide released from large combustion plants such as coal fired power stations

acidification of soil and water

knock on consequences for biodiversity eg in upland areas of the UK

addressed internationally by the UN economic comission for europe

control and monitoring based around the critical loads concept

taking many years to see recovery

eutrophication: nitrogen and phosphorous; more local
can both have agricultural sources

organisms such as some algae develop preferentially; blooms visible from space

contamination of lakes, inland waterways and coastal areas

again, critical load medlling is key

restrictions even on the places houses can be built in order to protect sensitive habitats

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16
Q

how does troposhperic ozone and climate change effect the environment

A

troposhperic ozone:
range of causes; some urban to rural pathways

local atmospheric chemistry generating global effects

some transboundary issues

affects plant growth above certain thresholds, reducing crop yields across europe

ozone in troposphere is considered a greenhouse gas

climate change:
driven primarily by carbon dioxide emissions

many impacts on wildlife identified in the second uk climate change risk assessment chapter 3

impacts include between trophic levels in the ecosystem

spring many days earlier and a longer growing season

impact on food chains and pest and disease organisms

17
Q

how does poor air quality effect people

A

WHO and EU and UK limits and standards for a range of chemicals and particulates

impacts on respiratory system with knock on cardiovascular impacts

particulates do not just come from vehicle exhaust pipes;
brakes, corrosion, abrasion of tyres, abrasion of road surfaces

generation of smog conditions due to interactions between weather and emssions

londons mayors office introduced congestion charge, low emission zones etc, in delhi disel tuk-tuks are being banned and replaced w petrol or gas vehicles and then electric ones

40,000 UK deaths a years are attributable to air pollution

electric vehicles should make the problem something of the past by 2030-2040. India leads the way with an ambitious target

currently 10s of thousands of people worldwide every year, the biggest environmental cause of death

causes are also from domestic cookers; here women and children are the most effected

ban on smoking in public places had immediate impact on heart attacks amongst bar staff in scotland

18
Q

how do heatwaves effect people

A

several 1000 deaths in Paris in 2000s

currently more people die from cold than from heat in UK

highest recorded temperature thus far is 54 degrees, occurred last year in iran

interaction between weather, age of victims and nature of buildings

heatwave plans now exist in many countries that vary with location

heatwave definitions vary from place to place

people can acclimatise over fairly short periods of time

thresholds from reduced efficiency, sleep disturbance is quite low especially at night

in UK and elsewhere much of current and new housing stock tends to overheat and situation may worsen due to climate change

by 2030 extreme conditions in the 2000s will have become the norm

19
Q

how do disease vectors effect people

A

a climate risk in need of urgent research

tick borne diseases such as lyme disease

west nile virus a complex system with many aspects affected by temperature and rainfall issues; control of vectors very difficult to achieve (mosquito able to breed in adventitious “ponds”)

movements of vectors from africa and siberia as weather patterns change due to climate change

indirect effects from movements of plant disease into europe; many european trees may be affected by a range of fungal conditions and this may affect people’s wellbeing as woodland is highly valued and delivers many ecosystem services

20
Q

how does pollen affect people

A

causes allergic reactions

can be most acute after thunderstorms as pollen grains can burst open and release allergenic material

weather warnings for hay fever, can be a debilitating condition

21
Q

how does stratospheric ozone effect people

A

CFCs are causative agent’ refrigerants that improved public health but also in many less vital aerosol propellants

original assessments were that here would be no problem although chemists understood that CFCs could breakdown ozone

correct chemistry only occurs in the low temperatures and atmospheric composition high in the atmosphere

by breaking down stratospheric ozone the ozone layer thins and thins creates impression of a hole in satellite imagery

a thinner ozone layer allows more UV radiation through, leading to higher incidences of skin cancer

rapidly regulated by montreal protocal and its amendments

22
Q

how do carcinogens effect people

A

very controversial in publics mind, glyphosate is currently under spotlight

issues with strength of evidence and how this is assessed even by committees of experts meeting under the auspices of UN agencies

much depends on how systems of classification are used and on how exposure is regulated

extensive use is often made of safety factors

evidence must come from approved studies following good protocols and there must be a mechanism and a dose related response

international review groupings must operate transparently

23
Q

how do industrial accidents effect people

A

seveso directive classifies a major accident as 1 death

many examples worldwide of much higher death tolls

wider costs not generally quantified

in UK factory fires, waste fires or fires at recycling facilities release PAHs, dioxins and metals, health effects difficult to quantify, general advice is to close windows

contamination of waterways and even aquifers not unknown

large UK example: fire at buncefield oil starge facility north of london

one of worst: bophal, india; methyl isocyante factory accident, caused 3,000 deaths and many 10s if not 100s of thousands exposed caused 20,000 to 50,000 hospital cases

24
Q

what are indirect impacts on human health of environmental events

A

flooding; causes PTSD, economic losses, general anxiety, loss of schooling, transport disruption, losses without health and social effects over a billion pounds annually

pesticide spraying: is a nuisance (cannot be commited under common law), can cause substantial anxiety due to neighbours

cancer or birth defect clusters near industrial plants; highly controversial, very difficult to establish cause and effect

noise pollution can caused reduced concentration and irritation

light pollution can cause loss of sleep in people or at least disturbed sleep, disturbs natural cycles in wildlife; turtles