What are biomagnified pollutants?
Biomagnified pollutants are pollutants that move more when moving along the food chain and are much more reinforced at higher levels of the food chain than they are towards the bottom. Several studies have indicated that many chemicals tend to biomagnify, including some chemicals that were previously assumed to be safe. In addition to being biomagnification, the threat of environmental benefits also poses a risk to people, especially people who consume animal products. Toxins bioakumulate for various reasons. They tend to be less soluble in water, making it difficult to flush the body and can be attached to fat cells and are built in the tissues of the body. Bioacumulation can be deadly for one animal, but can also contribute to biomagnification.
In the classic example of biomagnification, microorganisms in the ocean are exposed to the pollutant's pollutantThe buddy and the fish that eat them also accept these pollutants. Larger fish eat smaller fish and larger fish are consumed by seals. In every step of the journey, the pollutant concentration becomes increasingly higher, which represents the pollution transmitted from tens or hundreds of animals. When the polar bear eats a seal, biomagnified pollutants, it will be built at an unprecedented level in the polar bear body, causing polar disease, giving genetic abnormalities to its children or die.
One of the major problems with biomagnified pollutants is that it is difficult to identify them until they reach the higher levels of the food chain. In the above -mentioned polar bear example, it may take decades to manifest themselves in the polar bears' population, into which they have been eaten too much to take steps to reduce their prevalence in the atmosphere and ocean. Scientists may find that biomagnified pollutants cause polar bear to ill but cannot underNikopat considerable steps to prevent multiple polar bears, beyond the reduction of the distribution of pollutants in the hope that it will eventually develop a path from the food chain.
The problem of biomagnified pollutants is a special interest of regulatory agencies, because these agencies have to think about the impact of pollutants not only on individual organisms, but on the food chain as a whole. If chemicals are approved for the market and later appears as biomagnified pollutants in scientific research, it may be difficult to reflect regulatory organizations to protect the environment.