|
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) has requested
$20.3 million for fiscal year 2002 to screen,
test, and conduct research on endocrine disrupting chemicals,
widespread synthetic compounds that disrupt the functioning
of hormone systems.
Due to the serious hazard endocrine
disruptors pose to wildlife and humans, Congress required
EPA in the Food Quality Protection Act of 1996 to establish
a screening and testing program for these chemicals. Although
EPA has made some progress, no validated screens and tests
have been put in place.
Exposure to endocrine disruptors is
associated with reproductive, neurological, and behavioral
problems. These chemicals can disrupt normal cellular communication,
limit the production of chemical messengers and interfere
with development of organs, the immune and nervous systems,
reproductive function, and growth processes as well as increasing
the incidence of specific diseases (e.g., childhood diabetes,
childhood cancer, and thyroid diseases).
Many pesticides are endocrine disrupting
chemicals including
-
aldicarb
-
atrazine
-
endosulfan
-
lindane
(see the PANNA
pesticide database for more information: http://pesticideinfo.org).
Scientific studies have found endocrine
disruption in birds, fish, shellfish, mammals, alligators,
and turtles. High concentrations of suspect chemicals have
been found in whales, dolphins, porpoises, seals, and polar
bears. Killer whales in the Pacific Northwest contain some
of the highest concentrations of PCBs (an endocrine disruptor)
found in wildlife.
Bald eagles that nest along the shores
of the Great Lakes and eat food contaminated with endocrine
disrupting chemicals are experiencing continued reproductive
problems. Canadian scientists have linked spraying of endocrine
disrupting pesticides with declines in Atlantic salmon populations.
Effects on wildlife include brain damage,
premature deaths, reproductive problems, abnormal development
of the reproductive tract, both subtle and gross birth defects,
thyroid dysfunction, severely weakened immune systems, cancers,
and behavioral changes.
Humans Are
Also At Risk
There is now a growing collection of
studies revealing that some of these chemicals can affect
children's ability to learn, to socially integrate, to fend
off disease, and to reproduce. In most instances, there
is no way to answer without great uncertainty how endocrine
disruptors are affecting people, because there is no unexposed
population to study as a control group and because scientists
do not for ethical reasons conduct experiments on people.
Nevertheless, there is disturbing evidence
from studies in Michigan and New York that children
whose mothers were exposed to PCBs from contaminated fish
or other sources exhibit short-term memory and behavioral
problems.
As the children have grown, there has
been a consistent correlation between their developmental
problems and the PCBs (from fish or other sources) in their
mothers while they were in the womb.
Hormones influence development even
at extremely low doses: one-tenth of a trillionth of a gram.
Low doses of endocrine disruptors have been found to cause
disturbing and irreversible effects in male and female laboratory
mice exposed prenatally to endocrine disruptors.
Unfortunately, since we only know the
endocrine disruption effects of a tiny fraction of the thousands
of synthetic chemicals released into our environment, research
and testing of these chemicals is urgently needed. The U.S.
Congress will soon make a decision regarding the EPA's funding
request for vitally important programs to screen, test,
and conduct research on endocrine disruptors.
What You
Can Do
To support further action on these hazardous
chemicals, contact members of Congress as soon as possible
and urge them to approve EPA's funding request for screening,
testing, and conducting research on endocrine disrupting
chemicals.
How to reach members of Congress: Call
the U.S. Capitol switchboard at (202) 224-3121, look up
your Senator on the U.S. Senate Web site at http://www.senate.gov
or look up your Representative on the U.S. House of Representatives
website at http://www.house.gov.
To send a free email message urging
congressional representatives to support EPA's budget request
for its endocrine disruptor programs go to http://takeaction.worldwildlife.org.
Garden
State EnviroNews June
27, 2001
World
Wildlife Fund, 1250 24th Street NW, Suite
500, Washington DC, 20037-1175; phone (202) 778-9644; fax
(202) 530-0743; Web sites: http://wwfus.org
and http://takeaction.worldwildlife.org.
|