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         Toxins Environment:     more books (41)
  1. The Water Environment:Algal Toxins and Health (Environmental Science Research)
  2. Tests show falling levels of algae toxins.(Environment)(An advisory to avoid boating on the east side of Odell Lake is dropped): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
  3. Agency: Scores of youths exposed to toxins.(Environment)(Toxics alliance lists 56 suspected cases of Oregon schoolchildren exposed to pesticides since ... from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR) by Gale Reference Team, 2008-11-12
  4. Prevalence, structure and expression of urease genes in Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli from humans and the environment [An article from: International ... Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health] by D. Orth, K. Grif, et all 2006-11-15
  5. Pathways of Mycobacterium ulcerans infection: A review [An article from: Environment International] by A.A. Duker, F. Portaels, et all 2006-05-01
  6. Saving nature's medicine chest: snail toxins yield medical breakthroughs.(Environment): An article from: The Futurist
  7. Ruling to protect fish from toxins is mired in confusion.(Environment): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
  8. 29 Ways to Keep Your Children Toxin Free: Eliminate the Toxic Chemicals from Your Children's Environment by Marie Gagne, 2005-07-08
  9. Pollution: Treating Environmental Toxins (Green Technology) by Anne E. Maczulak, 2009-10-30
  10. Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-dioxins and -furans (PCDDs/PCDFs): Sources and Environmental Impact, Epidemiology, Mechanisms of Action, Health Risks (Environmental Toxin Series)
  11. Microbial Pest Control (Books in Soils, Plants, and the Environment) by Sushil Khetan, 2000-10-17
  12. Environmental Toxins: Psychological, Behavioral, and Sociocultural Aspects, 1973-1989 (Bibliographies in Psychology) by Cheryl Brown Travis, Barbara E. McLean, 1989-06
  13. Algal Toxins in Seafood and Drinking Water
  14. Toxic Legacy: Synthetic Toxins in the Food, Water and Air of American Cities by Patrick Sullivan, James J.J. Clark, et all 2006-12-04

81. Health & The Environment
to contain environmental toxins dangerous to children and future generations. Dr.Alan Greene Cheryl Greene. Center for Health, environment and Justice By
http://www.drgreene.com/122.html
QUICK SEARCH A - Z Guide Allergies Allergy Care Guide Asthma Care Guide Bedwetting Breastfeeding Childhood Obesity Diabetes Care Guide Ear Infections Genetics Immunizations Infectious Diseases Parenting Potty Training Rashes Safety Sleep DrGreene.com Topic Centers Mission Reviews Awards Readers Comments Press Room Partners and Supporters Contact Us Pediatric Information A-Z Guide Allergy Care Guide Asthma Care Guide Diabetes Care Guide DrGreene´s Chats FAQ Fast Facts Feature Articles Guidelines Pediatric Updates Special Feature Top Tips Community Activty Guide Advanced Search Community Central Chat Chat Schedule Cute Faces Family Friendly Recipes Parent-to-Parent Resources The DrGreene Team Newsletter Prenatal Newborn Infants Toddlers Pre-Schoolers School Age Teens / Adolescents Multimedia Library Children's Health Fertility
To have your parent-to-parent resource included on this page click here Alliance to End Childhood Lead Poisoning - The Alliance to End Childhood Lead Poisoning seeks to protect U.S. children from lead poisoning through policy solutions to prevent and control lead hazards in the environment, particularly in children's homes, and to identify and treat lead poisoned children.
Beyond Pesticides
- Beyond Pesticides provides information about pesticides and pesticide alternatives. The primary goal is to effect change through local action, stimulating discussion about the hazards of toxic pesticides and providing information about safe alternatives.

82. Organism In The Environment As A Whole
propagation. Distinguishing within the environment. food; toxins; predators;mates; competitors; Direction. value good / bad Context of valuation
http://www.xenodochy.org/orgenvwhd.html
Organism in the environment as a whole distinctions
© 1999 by Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr.
This is a working draft and is subject to change.
Last revised at
  • Distinguish in general Distinguishing self from environment Distinguishing within self
    • need for sustenance need for rest. propagation
    Distinguishing within the environment.
    • food toxins predators mates competitors Direction
    value - "good" / "bad"
    • Context of valuation
      • Individual survival
        • Food - good Toxins - bad Rest - good predators - bad
        Species survival
        • mates - good competitors - bad Life essentials
          • energy reproduction Distinguishing in general - Distinguish without substance, or pure distinguishing, is formally described by Laws of Form . Distinguishing with substance - territory - provides a way of organizing knowledge Distinguishing self from environment
            Maintaining the distinction between the self and the environment is the fundamental task of survival. In the context of the long term, this becomes reproducing one's own form - the fundamental task of species survival. These two elements comprise the simplest essentials of life. These two elements are necessary components of any life, but these are all there is to the simplest form - non-binders Distinguishing within self
            As part of the process of maintaining one's own form, one needs to have sensors to determine one's condition in this regard. A "sensor", in this regard, is simply a detection apparatus capable of responding to some condition or situation. A sensor is to be distinguished from an effector. A sensor distinguishes between two conditions and responds differently for the conditions. Conditions requiring sensors are both internal and external to the form of living entities. Internal sensors distinguish energy level needs, rest level needs, and replication needs.

83. The Academy Of Natural Sciences - Research - Know Your Environment - Microscopic
have reported suffering some health effects caused by inhaling the toxins, and now speciesthat welcome the changes that humans are causing in our environment.
http://www.acnatsci.org/research/kye/pfiester.html
You are in Research Know Your Environment
S E A R C H
Help us make
Know Your Environment even better with our quick reader survey
Articles
K NOW Y OUR E NVIRONMENT
A publication of the Environmental Associates About Article Index Links Other Publications Republishing Articles Feedback

Microscopic Murderer
Pollution may be motivating Pfiesteria to kill fish by the thousands
by Chris Reuther , Science Writer, Environmental Associates,
Academy of Natural Sciences
August 1998
Section 1
The Rise of Pfiesteria Section 2 Tracking a Fish Killer Section 3 Finding a Culprit Section 4 An Amazing Pest Section 5 Pfiesteria
M ost of us know that pollution is a threat to many species on earth. We know that by destroying habitats, humans are pushing many plants and animals toward extinction. But, what people are probably less aware of is that pollution can cause other species to thrive. As global warming causes climate shifts and as more pollutants degrade the land and water for familiar species, other rare species may find conditions favorable and suddenly become prominent. In many cases, these may be species that humans have never seen before. And often, we may wish we had never met them.

84. Center For Health And The Global Environment, Harvard Medical School
pathways of human exposure to the toxin, how the toxins are metabolized Risk AbatementStrategies control of pollutants once discharged into the environment.
http://www.med.harvard.edu/chge/course/introduction/hazards/transcript.htm
Environmental Health Hazards
Lecture Video and Slides (Available after Lecture)
Recommended Reading (Prior to Lecture)

Lecture Notes
Other Resources
Schedule Register Order VHS ... Feedback Course Home Introduction Basic Principles and Driving Forces 1 Climate Change Biodiversity Driving Forces 2 Emerging Diseases 1 Toxic Pollution and Human Health Emerging Diseases 2 Solutions 1 Global Change: Plant and Animal Health Solutions 2 Choose a Topic Introduction to Environmental Health Concepts Howard Hu
General Principles of Conventional Environmental Health: Strengths and Shortcomings:
  • Environmental Health is the study of pollution that increases the risk for disease. Certain forms of pollution have global distribution. For example, air pollution in the Ohio valley contributes to particulates and ozone in the north east. Seemingly garden variety diseases, for example cancer, heart disease, hypertension and kidney disease, and dementia are treated with drugs. The environmental contribution to other diseases is alluded to but not clearly proven. Some examples of cancers with an environmental link are prostate cancer and cadmium, Non-Hodgkins lymphoma and herbicides/pesticides, brain cancer and polycyclic hydrocarbons/petrochemical industry, soft tissue sarcoma and persistent organic pollutants.

85. CNN - Plants Recruited To Clean Up Toxins - April 27, 1996
CNN environment News Flower power. Plants recruited to clean up toxins. April27, 1996 Web posted at 732 am EDT. From Correspondent Mary Ann McRae.
http://www.cnn.com/EARTH/9604/27/flower.power/
Flower power
Plants recruited to clean up toxins
April 27, 1996
Web posted at: 7:32 a.m. EDT From Correspondent Mary Ann McRae TRENTON, New Jersey (CNN) Can plants rid the earth of radioactive waste and toxic metals? Yes, say some researchers. Ilya Raskin of Rutgers University says plants can help clean up hazardous waste sites through a process of phytoremediation. "Phytoremediation is the use of plants to remove contaminants from the environment and to render them harmless, as simple as that," he says. But it's not as simple as just putting a plant in the soil, Raskin says. It requires coaxing the plant into soaking up pollutants instead of nutrients. It also requires the right kind of plant, with the right kind of roots Rutgers, along with a small New Jersey company Phytotech is field testing sunflowers in the polluted ponds near the Chernobyl nuclear plant. "Using these plants, we will be able to remove radioactive nuclides from the water and make it clean for irrigation purposes or even as a source of drinking water," says Slavik Dushenkov of Phytotech.

86. DLC-ME | The Microbe Zoo | Dirtland | Toxic Waste Site
Cleanup of the rest of the toxins already in the environment (in the USA) is expectedto cost between $100 and $500 billion (that is about $500 to $2500 per
http://commtechlab.msu.edu/sites/dlc-me/zoo/zdtmain.html
Waste Reduction Bioremediation Organic Waste Inorganic Waste ... 2,4-D
Toxic Waste Site
Bubbling, oozing, slimy, stinky goo. The United States has at least 36,000 hazardous waste sites containing used oil, battery acid, PCB's, heavy metals, detergents, pesticides, old paint, plastics, radioactive wastes and more.
Although they are poisonous to us and to most kinds of animals and plants, many of these toxic compounds serve as food to some types of microbes. This is very good news for us, since microbes can eliminate or neutralize many toxic compounds in the environment. Not all of the news is good - sometimes microbes make pollution problems worse, as is the case in acid mine drainage. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has put 1,290 of these waste sites on the National Priority List. Sometimes toxins stored at some of these sites leak out of their containers and make their way into ground water, soil, lakes and rivers. Accidents, such as train derailments or crashes involving tanker trucks transporting toxic wastes or oil spills from ships, can also release large quantities of these dangerous chemicals into the environment. Build-up of toxins can also result from release of small amounts over a large area and/or a long time. An example of this is the runoff of excessive fertilizers and pesticides applied to lawns and farm fields. Cleaning up these toxic wastes has cost $20 billion over the past 15 years in the United States. Cleanup of the rest of the toxins already in the environment (in the U.S.A.) is expected to cost between $100 and $500 billion (that is about $500 to $2500

87. The Environmental Literacy Council - Environment And Health
In addition to infectious agents in the environment, there are natural andmanmade toxins and materials that pose a hazard to human health.
http://www.enviroliteracy.org/subcategory.php/170.html
Home About ELC Site Map Contact Us ... Food
Environment and Health
The world has always been full of dangers for humans. Early hunters and gathers had to find out by trial and sometimes fatal error which plants and fruits were safe to eat and which were poisonous. Cities in previous centuries were crowded, dusty places and poor sanitation spread diseases such as cholera, the plague, and tuberculosis among the population. Advances in health, sanitation, and nutrition have more than doubled longevity worldwide. The major causes of death throughout history smallpox, flu, cholera, tuberculosis, malaria, plagues, and measles have been virtually eliminated as serious threats in industrialized nations. Influenza, HIV-AIDS, diarrheal diseases, tuberculosis, measles,and malaria are the primary killers in Africa and other developing regions. Many of these diseases are related to poor environmental practices, including land and water use. Water-bourne diseases are estimated to cause 5 million deaths a year, particularly affecting children and the elderly. Schistosomiasis is believed to have arisen in the last few decades because of irrigation practices in hot climates. Sub-Saharan Africa is undergoing a serious health crisis. It is currently one of only two regions in the world in which longevity is declining (the other is Russia). One million people die of malaria each year; ninety percent of these deaths occur in Sub-Saharan Africa. In fact, 5 percent of all children in this region die of malara. Seventy percent of all cases of HIV-AIDS occur in Sub-Saharan Africa.

88. Selected Environmental Toxins Web Sites
brought to Utah so that we can eliminate the possibility of nerve agent and othertoxins being released into our air. Healthy environment Alliance of Utah (HEAL
http://medlib.med.utah.edu/library/edumaterials/eduservices/toxin-urls.html
Selected Environmental Toxins Web Sites
Government Web Sites:
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
ATSDR's mission is to serve the public by using the best science, taking responsive public health actions, and providing trusted health information to prevent harmful exposures and disease related to toxic substances. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is recognized as the lead federal agency for protecting the health and safety of people, at home and abroad, providing credible information to enhance health decisions, and promoting health through strong partnerships. CDC serves as the national focus for developing and applying disease prevention and control, environmental health, and health promotion and education activities designed to improve the health of the people of the United States. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
The EPA is the primary federal agency responsible for regulating, monitoring, enforcing and setting standards relating to environmental toxins. Their site has an enormous amount of information. The complexity of the agency and it's myriad sub-units can cause some navigational confusion. Some links within the EPA site of particular interest are:

89. U.S. Government Environmental Webpages
on environment and Public Works, yes, environment, fisheries, floods, noise, nuclearpower, oceans, pollution, toxins, transportation, wildlife, agency websites.
http://www.library.wwu.edu/cbl/rob/envwebs.htm
Library Information System
Selected Government Environmental Webpages
Selected
U.S. Government Environmental Webpages This is a selection of websites about the environment produced by agencies of the U.S. Government. It does NOT include websites that are essentially individual documents (e.g. Effects of Acid Rain: Forests ). It does list selected websites that contain agency homepages (e.g. Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory libraries (collections of document pages, e.g. NEPAnet databases (data that you can manipulate in some way, such as creating tables or maps, e.g. National Asbestos Registry System news (as in news reports, e.g. National Oceanographic Data Center News, not "what's new on this website")and search engines. This symbol indicates a website that is often used at Western Libraries. See also an excellent metadata website at Idaho State University
agency website agency home-
page library database news search engine
(it searches the...) Agriculture Dept.
Forest Service yes forests agency websites Global Climate Program Office yes climate yes Natural Resources Conservation Service yes conservation Commerce Dept. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

90. ARS Project: Prevent The Occurrence Of Toxins In Water To Protect Food And The E
Prevent The Occurrence Of toxins In Water To Protect Food And The environment (404372)Toidentify and quantify biologically active compounds, particularly
http://www.nps.ars.usda.gov/projects/projects.htm?ACCN_NO=404372

91. Wired News: They're Poisoning Our Kids
WASHINGTON The 24 billion pounds of neurological toxins released annuallyinto the US environment are linked to millions of cases of developmental
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,38661,00.html
Welcome to Wired News. Skip directly to: Search Box Section Navigation Content Search:
Wired News Animations Wired Magazine HotBot (the Web)
They're Poisoning Our Kids
Environment News Service NULL Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,38661,00.html 11:35 AM Sep. 08, 2000 PT WASHINGTON The 24 billion pounds of neurological toxins released annually into the U.S. environment are linked to millions of cases of developmental disabilities in children, claims a report released Friday. Louisiana and Texas are the worst chemical polluters of air and water, according to the report, which was prepared by the National Environmental Trust, Physicians for Social Responsibility, and the Learning Disabilities Association of America. They were followed by Tennessee, Ohio, Illinois, Georgia, Virginia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Florida. The report is the first to comprehensively examine the scope and sources of toxic chemicals known to cause health and developmental problems in children, said NET policy director Jeff Wise. The National Academy of Sciences estimated earlier this year that 3 percent of developmental and neurological defects in children are caused by exposure to known toxic substances, including drugs, cigarette smoke, lead, PCBs, and mercury.

92. Centre For Science And Environment (CSE) 17th June, 1998 Press Release
The second day of the National Conference on Health and environment discussedthe effect of environmental toxins and air pollution on the human body.
http://www.cseindia.org/html/au/au4_070898.htm

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PRESS RELEASE OF 8 th JULY 1998 Did you remember to take your dose of pesticides today?
The Green Revolution gave us food security - and convulsions, visual defects, Parkinson's Syndrome, headaches, sleep disturbances, poor attention spans.... The second day of the National Conference on Health and Environment discussed the effect of environmental toxins and air pollution on the human body First the good news India has increased its food production by four times since the Green Revolution. Then the bad news it has increased its pesticide consumption by nine times to achieve this fourfold increase. At the National Conference on Health and Environment organised by the Centre for Science and Environment, Dr. H N Saiyed from the National Institute of Occupational Health, Ahmedabad, warned that their studies among the general population in India has revealed high levels of pesticide residues in blood, fatty tissues and human milk. The three-day Conference, inaugurated by Vice President Shri Krishan Kant yesterday, focused on environmental toxins and air pollution today. Pesticidal contamination of animal feed has led to widespread contamination of milk and milk products, including human milk. People in Delhi have one of the world's highest levels of DDT accumulated in their body fat. Dr. Devika Nag, a neurologist from the King George Medical College, warned that exposure to toxins leads to dysfunctions of the central nervous system, and reproductive disorders.

93. Dangerous Levels Of Toxins Miscalculated
Dangerous levels of toxins miscalculated. Risk assessments and regulations on safelimits for these substances in medicine and the environment may have to be
http://www.nature.com/nsu/nsu_pf/030210/030210-8.html
Dangerous levels of toxins miscalculated
Potential pollutants and poisons may be beneficial in low doses. 13 February 2003 Helen R Pilcher We may be putting too much effort into cleaning our enviroments. The levels at which potentially toxic substances such as mercury and lead are classified as dangerous may have been miscalculated, two US scientists are warning. Risk assessments and regulations on safe limits for these substances in medicine and the environment may have to be rethought, they warn There are safe levels below which potential pollutants and poisons may actually be beneficial, say Edward Calabrese and Linda Baldwin of the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. For the past 30 years, cancer-causing chemicals and X-rays have been viewed largely as dangerous whatever their level. "The field of toxicology has made a terrible blunder," says Calabrese. "A lot of high-powered people need to take the time to explore this." For example, dioxins, which are industrial by-products that at certain doses can cause cancer, can actually reduce tumour growth in some species. Similarly, small amounts of the toxic trace metal cadmium can promote plant growth. "What we call 'toxic chemicals' is a misnomer," says cell biologist and UK government advisor Anthony Trewavas from Edinburgh University. "Mild chemical stress is beneficial."

94. RATE
PO BOX 25188 Phone (902) 4791440 Halifax, NS B3M 4H4 email rate@chebucto.ns.ca.Help us reduce the use of toxic compounds in our community.
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/Environment/RATE/
P.O. BOX 25188 Phone (902) 479-1440
Halifax, NS B3M 4H4 email rate@chebucto.ns.ca Help us reduce the use of toxic compounds in our community We are people in the Halifax Regional Municipality who are working to reduce the amounts of toxic compounds released in our community. Right now we are seeking support for the passing of a municipal bylaw to control pesticide spraying. You can contact RATE at the addresses and number given at the top of this page. We have information about pesticides, and sample letters of support.
Continue

95. Environment Canada's Green Lane: Topics - Pollution
Management Agreement among environment Canada, Ontario Ministry of the environment and Algoma Steel Inc. Green Lane TM , environment Canada's World Wide
http://www.ec.gc.ca/pollution_e.html

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Waste Management Glossary of Terms To see news releases or statements and speeches on this and other issues and topics, consult the

96. EPA/OPPT: Chemical Fact Sheets
Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics in the US environmental Protection Agency has fact sheets and chemical summaries for select materials. affect you and the environment, what happens to them in the environment, who regulates them, and
http://www.epa.gov/docs/chemfact

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Chemicals In the Environment: OPPT Chemical Fact Sheets
EPA has developed information summaries on selected chemicals to describe how you might be exposed to these chemicals, how exposure to them might affect you and the environment, what happens to them in the environment, who regulates them, and whom to contact for additional information.
Chemical Fact Sheets Available in ASCII text format

97. Environmental Health Issues
In childhood, exposure to environmental toxins (poisons) may not only cause immediate(acute) illnesses but may also increase the risk for longterm (chronic
http://kidshealth.org/parent/firstaid_safe/home/environ.html

KidsHealth
Parents
Children do not live and grow in a vacuum. The purity of their food and water, the quality of their air, and the safety of their school and home environments are all important factors that influence their health and development. In childhood, exposure to environmental toxins (poisons) may not only cause immediate (acute) illnesses but may also increase the risk for long-term (chronic) problems. It can even trigger cell damage that eventually leads to cancer Health experts have spent decades trying to determine the full environmental effects of certain toxic chemicals. Environmental scientists, like detectives, must often sort through years of evidence to determine the most likely cause of a particular pattern of symptoms. Sometimes the problem is man-made, like the lead in old paint chips, but sometimes it's as "natural" as a cloud of radon gas. As scientists continue to add to the list of natural and man-made environmental health threats, parents need to expand their own safety checklists for possible toxins in their children's home and school environments. In some cases, simply filtering drinking water or removing old paint on a window frame can be a major step toward protecting a child's health.
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98. Environment Centre - Publications - Blue-green Algae And Algal Toxins
the use of toxicity tests is the only way of knowing whether the water samples containtoxins or not. Publications of the City of Helsinki environment Centre.
http://www.hel.fi/ymk/english/publications/f_0901.htm
Marjut Räsänen, Leea Mustakallio and Katja Pellikka Blue-green algae and algal toxins
at the public beaches and in the sea area of Helsinki
during the summer of 2001
- Summary - T he occurrence, species composition and toxicity of blue-green algae in the water at the public beaches at Munkkiniemi, Hietaranta and Suomenlinna was monitored during the high season for swimming in June-August, 2001. In order to obtain an estimate of the situation in the sea area outside Helsinki, samples from three nearby stations measured by the automatic measuring equipment installed at the passenger ferry Finnjet, as well as some separately taken samples from the open sea area of Helsinki, were included. The species composition of blue-green algae was estimated semi-quantitatively by inverted microscopy, and the total amount of algae was measured indirectly as chlorophyll a . The toxicity was analysed using a quantitative laboratory test which is based on the immunological ELISA-method. The test gives an estimate of the total amount of microcystins and nodularin in the samples. The air temperature as well as the temperature, turbidity and salinity of the water from the surveyed beaches were also monitored. The highest amounts of blue-green algae in the Gulf of Finland in 2001 were observed during the last whole week of July, when an almost unbroken toxic mat of algae nearly reached the coastal waters of Helsinki. The mat was made up of the blue-green algae

99. Environment And Health
discussing why the government has done nothing about the problem of environmentaltoxins. Women's Health and the environment Comprehensive information about
http://womenshealth.about.com/library/bltoxins.htm
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Environmental Toxins and Women's Health Issues Avoiding Environmental Hazards During Pregnancy
(Parenthood Web) Chemicals and Hearing: Danger Ahead
Hearing Health Chemical Industry Secrets: Bane on the Bayou
Evirotel.org article reprinted from the Houston Chronicle that discusses the chemical dangers to residents of Lake Charles, LA. Dioxins and PCBs Linked to Endometriosis
(Environmental Research Center) Dioxin Homepage Comprehensive resource for further study. EPA-Concerned Citizen Information about reducing environmental toxins and how you can make a difference. Endocrine Disruptor Research Inventory of current research at the EPA. Endocrine Disruptors Details of an EPA plan to solicit research applications from the scientific community.

100. NOAA Photo Library/NOAA Restoration Center Catalog
1. r000ad00, The introduction of toxins into the marine environmenthave drastic effects on the organisms that live there. This image
http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/habrest/adt.htm
NOAA Restoration Center Image Catalog
Miscellaneous (MS)
Animals Damaged By Toxins
The introduction of toxins into the marine environment have drastic effects on the organisms that live there. This image shows a "normal" rock sole. Compare with some of the images that follow.
The introduction of toxins into the marine environment have drastic effects on the organisms that live there. This image shows a "normal" rock sole top and a "normal" English sole, bottom. Compare with some of the images that follow.
The introduction of toxins into the marine environment have drastic effects on the organisms that live there. This image shows a rock sole with fin erosion.
The introduction of toxins into the marine environment have drastic effects on the organisms that live there. This image shows a Starry flounder with fin erosion.
The introduction of toxins into the marine environment have drastic effects on the organisms that live there. Close up of a Starry flounder with fin erosion.
The introduction of toxins into the marine environment have drastic effects on the organisms that live there. Close up of a Barred Sand Bass with pectoral fin blunting.
The introduction of toxins into the marine environment have drastic effects on the organisms that live there. This fish has erosion of the fin.

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