"Is That A Fat Wad Of Research $$$ In Your Pocket?"

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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via: "Is That A Fat Wad Of Research $$$ In Your Pocket?" - Small Dead Animals




Pollution is weakening polar bear penises



Poor polar bears just can't catch a break: It's already been shown that the sex organs of these endangered species have been shrinking over time, and now it seems that the bones inside their *****es are growing weaker as well.

In a new study published in Environmental Research, scientists examined samples of the ***** bone -- a bone called the baculum that allows some mammals to have longer, more successful mating sessions -- to see if environmental pollutants might be effecting their density. They focused on a type of industrial contaminant called polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs.


"These chemicals enter the atmosphere at lower latitudes where they were used, and are then deposited down from the cold polar air, so Arctic animals are more highly exposed than animals in more temperate or equatorial regions," University of Florida researcher Margaret James (who wasn't involved in the study) told New Scientist.

Sure enough, the authors of the new study found a link between high levels of PCBs and low baculum density. The researchers can't be sure that PCBs are to blame, but this isn't the first indication that they could be causing serious trouble. In fact, the once-widely used chemicals were banned by the United Nations in 2011.

Used to create different kinds of plastics and rubbers during the 20th century, these compounds have proven difficult to remove from the environment since their ban. They remain stuck to sediments and are carried through waterways, building up in concentration (and toxicity) the higher up you go in the food chain. For top predators, such as humans and polar bears, the effects can be dire -- we consume all of the PCBs the animals we eat have stored in their body fat, and that adds up.


In humans, PCBs have been linked to all kinds of ailments. Increased risk of cancer is the largest concern, but studies have suggested that PCBs can cause developmental and behavioral problems as well.

But polar bears are already in serious danger of going extinct, so if PCBs are making it even more difficult for them to reproduce, we've got a major problem on our hands.

And researchers worry that the effects of climate change and industrial pollution may be magnifying each other: Climate change leads to food scarcity, which makes polar bears skinnier. And if they've got less body mass, then smaller doses of environmental pollutants will be enough to cut off their reproductive chances.


more from the fukking labcoat crew and those that report on them:



http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...26/pollution-is-weakening-polar-bear-*****es/


Another trial balloon filled with Globull Warming weasel words to frighten the ignorami.

Strange how all the "important crises" today re GW seem to occur in distant remote areas
only accessible to the Gaia anointed.

* entire article c&p'ed as the stupid forum censor doesn't allow PENIS, and I'm tired of doing the reacharound, err, workarounds for it.
 

waldo

House Member
Oct 19, 2009
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more from the fukking labcoat crew and those that report on them:


why so desperate in your own reach-around to attempt to associate PCB pollution with GW? Surely your denier C&P well hasn't dried up that much... has it?