Toxic Metals: Emissions, Deposition, Health Effects,
Controls & the relation to incinerators, coal plants, acid rain, food,
etc.
Heavy metals
are naturally occurring elements that have a high atomic weight and a density
at least 5 times greater than that of water. Their multiple industrial,
domestic, agricultural, medical and technological applications along with
emissions from burning coal have led to their wide distribution in the
environment and food supply, raising concerns over their potential effects on
human health and the environment.
Mercury
in dental
amalgam
is a hidden source of
global
mercury
pollution
, resulting
from daily excretion of significant levels into
sewers
and thus fresh and
saltwater rivers and bays by people with amalgam fillings and from dental
offices and the illegal diversion of dental
mercury
into the artisanal and small-scale gold mining
sector, to
crematoria emissions
from the deceased and s
ewage sludge
that
is sold to farmers.
Even after the last
mercury
dental
amalgam
is placed, its toxic legacy will continue for
decades, because of its pervasive bioaccumulation in the environment.
Government regulatory agencies should make it mandatory to utilize available
technologies, not only in developing countries, but also in developed
countries, to reduce
mercury
contamination.
(2.4)
These significant
mercury
sources
result in air, water, and food contamination that consequently have a negative
impact on human health (2.4).
Their toxicity of toxic metals depends on several factors
including the dose, route of exposure, and chemical species, as well as the
age, gender, genetics, and nutritional status of exposed individuals. Because
of their high degree of toxicity, arsenic, lead, mercury, cadmium, and chromium
rank among the priority metals that are of public health significance (1a).
These metallic elements are considered systemic toxicants that are known to
induce multiple organ damage, even at lower levels of exposure. They are also
classified as human carcinogens (known or probable) according to the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, and the International Agency for Research on
Cancer. (2.2)
Exposure to these toxic
heavy metals is common and low levels of exposure are documented to cause
chronic systemic oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and inflammation,
which
as
shown here
synergistically
cause immune, cardiovascular,
neurological, endocrine, allergy, and fertility problems or conditions.
N
-
acetyl-cysteine
(NAC), a precursor of glutathione,
affords protection against lead-induced cytotoxicity and oxidative stress
(9.6d).
Long-Term supplementation
with
the algae extract (
Chlorella and Fucus
sp
)
and
Aminosulphurate
Supplementation modulate SOD-1
activity and decrease heavy metals (Hg
++
, Sn) levels in patients
with long-term dental titanium implants and/or
amalgam-
fillings restorations. (9.6c)
The original
source of much of the information for this review was the reading files or
summary articles of the State Pollution Control Agencies of Florida, Minnesota,
and Wisconsin, and the U.S. EPA from the 1980s and 90s, along with updates and
newer information from the NIH
Pubmed
abstract
files and medical newsletters. This paper has been periodically updated since
that time until now.
The health effects of toxic metals are
synergistic
with other toxic exposures s
uch as
pesticides
, herbicides,&
other
endocrine
disrupting substances
like organochlorine compounds
, POP
s,
PAHs
, PCBs, etc. There are also
synergistic effects with the various types of parasites, bacteria, viruses to
which people have common exposures and commonly become infected when the immune
system is weakened by toxic exposures. Studies have found considerable genetic
variability in
susceptibility
to toxic metals as well. The
health effects caused
pesticides
and herbicides
include neurological conditions such as
Alz
.
Disease, ALS., Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson’s, ADHD, seizures, developmental
conditions, etc. as well as
autoimmune
conditions
such as Diabetes, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Lupus, etc. While there
is considerable commonality to the health effects commonly caused by the toxic
metals, and effects are cumulative and
synergistic
with other toxic exposures,
this paper will concentrate on the health effects of elemental
mercury from amalgam fillings and toxic metals.
I. Health Effects of Toxic Metals (mercury, lead, cadmium,
chromium, etc.)
II. Mercury in Fish and the Food Chain of Lakes and Streams
and Bays
III. Effect of Toxic Metals on Forests and Plant Ecosystems
IV. Sources of Mercury Emissions and Mercury Content of
Fuels
V. Emissions of Other Toxic Metals from Human
Activities
VI. The Relation of Acidity and Acid Rain to Toxic Metal
Impacts on Aquatic Systems, Fish, the Food Chain, and Health
VII. European Experience with Mercury Emissions
VIII. Experience with Emissions Control Equipment for Toxic Metals
and Mercury Reduction Options
IX. Toxic Metals in Flue Ash and Bottom Ash
X. Heavy Metals and Drinking Water
XI. Toxic Metals from Sewer Plants and Urban
Runof
Toxic metals
(mercury, lead, cadmium, aluminum, etc.) appear to be the number one
environmental health threat in Florida and most states currently and appear to
be seriously affecting thousands of Floridians, especially children and older
people (1-1.7,2,2.2, etc.). Toxic metals have been documented to
be neurotoxic, as well as reproductive and developmental toxins.
Occupational exposure to mercury and toxic metals are documented to commonly
cause chronic health conditions (1.8,1.9,2.2,9.8,46, etc.).
Synergistic effects
of multiple exposures (38) and
susceptibility factors
that reduce the bodies detoxification processes are a major
reason that some are affected by exposures more than others. A study found that
for low levels of
lead, cadmium, arsenic,
and mercury, combined exposure disrupted brain synaptic homeostasis even though
the levels of each were supposedly low safe levels (71).
Over 60 % of Florida
lakes and rivers tested last year by the Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission
had dangerous levels of mercury in the fish and food chain (33) and over
20% of all U.S. lakes have similar warnings (64). High levels of mercury
are also being found in other wildlife such as frogs, turtles, raccoons,
alligators, etc. with many birds and an endangered Florida panther being killed
by high levels of mercury. Florida is one of a growing
list
of at least 40 states and 4
Canadian provinces (20,64) with bans or limits on eating fish from
thousands of lakes or rivers with dangerously high levels of mercury in fish.
Europe has similar experience. Dangerous levels of mercury have also
been found in shark, tuna, sea trout,
sailcat
,
mackerel, bluefish, etc., as well as toxic metals in shellfish
(17a). Over 90% of the health risk to the public (and animals)
from toxic metals such as mercury (as well as from dioxin) has been found to be
related to such toxics that are bioaccumulating in the food
chain.
Mercury, cadmium, and
lead have been found to be
estrogenic chemicals
that disrupt the endocrine/reproductive/ hormonal systems of
animals at low levels of exposure, with serious adverse seen on animals and
humans (14.5,14.7). They are also well documented to be neurotoxic and to
commonly cause major chronic neurological conditions.
Lead is a persistent
toxic
metal
and associated with impairment of various body functions in occupational
workers. A study results (9.8a) revealed that lead-exposed workers had
significantly high BLLs, median (range), 29.1 (9.0-61.1)
microg/dL compared with controls, 8.3 (1.0-21.6) microg/dL.
IntraOcularPressure
was associated with
blood
lead and mercury levels (46).
Oxidative
stress (MDA, GGT) and inflammatory markers (high-sensitivity CRP) were
significantly increased.
Blood
pressure
was raised, whereas hemoglobin was
decreased in exposed group. Serum urea, uric acid, phosphate, and ALT were
significantly raised in lead-exposed workers. Serum albumin, total proteins,
and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were decreased.
Blood
lead showed a significant positive correlation
with serum GGT, MDA, CRP, urea, creatinine, and uric acid. It was concluded
that lead exposure increases oxidative stress that correlates with adverse
changes in hematological, renal, and hepatic function in the occupational
workers. Elevated
blood
lead
has positive correlation with oxidative stress, inflammatory and biochemical
markers that might be used to detect impairment in the body function in lead
exposed workers.
A meta-analysis of occupational exposures found
that lead exposure increased the risk for ALS and
Alzheimer�s
and
Parkinson�s
by at least 60% (9.8b). Other studies
found that lead causes hypertension (9.8,46).
The prominent mechanism of
action associated with the development of hypertension seems to be oxidative
stress and kidney damage for lead, while increased RAS activation links
methylmercury to hypertension (9.8d). Not only are heavy metals and arsenic
associated with high blood pressure, but phthalates are also; and all of these
have
synergistic effects
(9.8e). A meta-analysis found
that there was a significant positive association between
mercury
and
hypertension and between
mercury
and
BP (9.8f). Another study showed that the mean values of Cd and Hg were
significantly higher in scalp hair and
blood
samples of hypertensive patients as compared with healthy
controls, whereas Zn and Se concentrations were found to be lower in
hypertensive patients (9.8g). The levels of both Hg & Cd were 2-3-folds
higher in scalp hair and
blood
samples
of non-hypertensive smoker subjects as compared with nonsmoker controls. It was
observed that exposure of Toxic Elements via cigarette smoking may be
synergistic with other risk factors associated with hypertension. In a
representative sample of the Korean adult population,
blood
Manganese level was associated with an increased
risk of
hypertension(
9.8h).
Urinary concentrations of several phthalate
metabolites at age 3 years, compared to other time periods, were more strongly
associated with decreased cognitive abilities in a group of children
tested(
9.8e).
Exposure to cadmium in
the jewelry industry is a significant source of occupational cadmium exposure.
Other occupational sources include the manufacture of nickel-cadmium batteries,
metal plating, zinc and lead refining, smelting of cadmium and lead, and
production of plastics(40b). Cadmium is also an environmental pollutant that
accumulates in leafy vegetables and plants, including tobacco. Major toxicities
anticipated from cadmium exposure involve the renal, pulmonary, and, to a
lesser extent, gastrointestinal systems. These include the development of renal
proximal tubular dysfunction, glomerular damage with progressive renal disease,
and respiratory symptoms including pneumonitis and emphysema. Low-level cadmium
exposure has also been associated with increased urinary calcium excretion and
direct bone toxicity, effects that recent research suggests may result in the
development of osteoporosis. The body burden of cadmium, over half of which may
reside in the kidneys, is most often measured through the use of urinary
cadmium levels. Blood cadmium measurements generally reflect current or recent
exposure and are especially useful in cases with a short exposure period and
only minimal accumulation of cadmium in the kidneys. Both ss2-microglobulin and
alpha1-microglobulin serve as organ-specific, early-effect biomarkers of
tubular proteinuria and thus play a role in identifying early signs of
cadmium-induced renal damage in those with potential exposures(40b).
Cadmium (and mercury)
has been found to be a major cause of neurological dysfunction such as
Alzheimer's disease and
other
dementia
(15.1,5,9.7d). Cadmium has also been shown to be toxic to the testes and
sperm at fairly low levels and to damage the placenta, which can cause damage
or death to the fetus (46).
A study found that cadmium is significantly associated with
metabolic syndrome (40c).
A 2-fold increase in
mercury concentrations at 16-
weeks
gestation was
associated with 0.83 point- higher BASC-2 anxiety scores. Maternal and cord
blood mercury concentrations at delivery were associated with parent-reported
anxiety at 8 years (9.7a). Among boys with low level gestational lead
exposure, a study found lower scores for cognitive functions, along with
increasing cord blood lead levels (9.7b). Several studies have found Arsenic to
be significantly associated with type 2 diabetes and other conditions (9.5a). Total
urine arsenic was associated with increased prevalence of type
2 diabetes, and since there is a widespread exposure worldwide this
finding supports the hypothesis that low levels of exposure to
inorganic arsenic in drinking water may play a role in diabetes prevalence. Arsenic multifactorial
effects include accelerating birth and postnatal weight gains, elevated body
fat content, glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, and increased serum lipid
profile. Arsenic also elevated cord blood and placental, as well as
postnatal serum leptin levels. The data from human studies indicate an
association between inorganic arsenic exposure and the risk
of diabetes and obesity. �A study also found polymorphisms in
diabetes- related genes to be a factor in toxic effects (9.5a). Studies
(9.5b,61b)
support the role of
maternal exposure to heavy toxic metals that persist
longtime in the environment as a risk factor for Gestational Diabetes Mellitus.
Mercury is
according to EPA the most toxic substance people commonly come in contact with
and is a common cause of
most chronic health conditions
, including
immune conditions
;
autoimmune conditions
,
cardiovascular
condtions
,
endocrine conditions
,
allergic conditions
,
neurological conditions
, etc. Dental amalgam is the
largest source of mercury
in most people who have amalgam fillings, with
continuous vaporization of
mercury
in
all who have amalgams, which is increased
by
galvanic action of mixed metals
in the mouth, and by common exposure
to
EMF, wi-fi, and microwaves
which increases vaporization of dental
amalgams. Some people are more easily affected by mercury and toxic metals than
others, due to metals immune reactivity(16.2),
susceptibility factors
such as blood allele type or factors which reduce
people�s
natural detoxification ability, and
synergisms with other toxic exposures
or EMF or wi-fi. Most people with any of
these chronic conditions who have dental amalgams usually
recover or significantly improve
after safe amalgam replacement with proper
immune support (16.2, etc.). This is often also true for those with
mixed
metals
such
as gold crowns, which are often placed over
amalgam fillings and have continuous mercury exposure, or titanium implants
with amalgams, or other metals (16.2). The metals people are found to be most
commonly immune reactive to are nickel, gold, palladium, mercury, and titanium
(16.2a). Blood lymphocyte immune reactivity tests are the most effective at
assessing such immune reactivity (16.2), but patch tests can also be used
though slightly less effective (16.2).
Most of the mercury in Florida lakes and soils is from
atmospheric deposition, and the main sources of air emissions are municipal
incinerators, medical waste incinerators, and coal combustion. Dental amalgam
which is the
largest source of mercury in sewers
is also a significant source in rivers,
lakes, and fish (14.9). A Dept. of Environmental Protection
report said that past tests indicate that Florida incinerators and power plants
were emitting approx. 6 tons and 3.4 tons per year of mercury emissions to the
Florida environment. Such facilities also emit large volumes of
lead, cadmium, and other toxics. Of the approx. 6 tons
of mercury generated in Fla. by coal plants, approx. 50% appear to be as air
emissions with the rest going into the ash. Ash from incinerators and coal
plants is a large and continuing problem. There appear to be only minor
natural sources of mercury in Florida, other than recycling of previously
deposited mercury by plants, soils, etc. which is significant in some areas. Coal
plants from other states and oil combustion in Florida together appear to
deposit almost as much mercury as Fla. coal plants, but Florida plants also
affect other states.
Studies in Wisconsin and Canada indicated only
one gram of mercury per year deposited in an average sized lake (25 acres) is
sufficient to contaminate fish and the food chain at dangerous levels requiring
a fish consumption ban or limitation (18). The amount of mercury
emissions each year by incinerators and coal plants (36 grams/square mile)
are enough to uniformly deposit 16 grams and 20 grams per square mile
respectively, for each of the 53,800 square miles of
Florida. These levels each appear to be well above the level
of deposition required to cause dangerous levels of mercury in fish throughout
the state (2.5 gm/
sm
), especially in lakes with low
acidity or low alkalinity like many of Florida's lakes (1.5,1.6). The average
level of deposition into Minnesota lakes with mercury health warnings was 13
micrograms per square meter (34 grams per square mile) and for Florida
the average deposition throughout Florida in 2001 was 17.6
micrograms per square
meter(
1.5b).
The levels of the toxic metals-
mercury, lead, cadmium, copper, selenium, arsenic, zinc, and silver are
increasing cumulatively in the environment due to atmospheric emissions
from human activity. Mercury levels in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Canada,
and Sweden were found to be increasing in sediments, soils, and fish at rates
between 2% and 5% per year. Levels in Florida have also been found
to be increasing by a Univ. of Florida study. Toxic metals were
found in water body sediments sampled at levels exceeding the FDEP toxics
criteria in 30% of "reaches" sampled for mercury, 15% for cadmium,
20% for copper, 15% for lead, etc. The higher rates were in areas with major
emission sources and in recent years. At this rate of increase,
levels double in as little as 10 years. Levels of toxic metals in
soils and plants in industrial areas were found to be doubling in many cases
every 3 to 10 years. Mercury, lead, cadmium, and manganese are now
being deposited in some areas at levels toxic to humans as well as other
animals and plants. The other toxic metals previously listed are
being deposited at levels toxic to plants or other organisms.
High
levels of other toxic metals have also been found in drinking water, surface
water, sediments, and the food chain throughout Florida. Toxic metal air
emissions have been suggested to be a factor in high lung cancer rates of some
areas of North Florida. Toxic metals have been documented to cause large
numbers of learning disabilities, neurological disorders, vascular disease,
hormonal problem, reproductive problems, and kidney disease (5,1.8,14.7,27), as
well as being major factors in the promotion of cancer and birth defects
(7.5,7.6). Approximately 250,000 U.S. children are born each year
with birth defects diagnosed at or shortly after birth. Birth defects are the
leading cause of infant mortality in the United States. Congenital anomalies,
sudden infant death syndrome, and premature birth combined account for more
than 50% of all infant mortality (62).
According to Federal studies,
thousands of children appear to have their learning ability and health
permanently adversely affected in Florida each year. Because of this, all
school systems were ordered by EPA to have their water systems
tested. Over 20% of Leon county school water fountains were found to
have dangerous levels of lead in the water, and higher levels were found in
some other counties. An EPA drinking water survey found that the
average lead level in drinking water in many areas of Florida was above the EPA
drinking water standard of 20 parts per billion, a level shown high enough to
cause significant health effects. A large
proportion of drinking water in some areas of Florida appears to have dangerous
levels of lead from pipes, solder joints, brass fixtures, or water
fountains.
The increase in toxic metals in
water and the food chain has been shown to be related to increased acidity of
drinking water and surface water. Additional sources of large amounts of
metals in bay, lake, or river sediments are sewer or industrial
outfalls and urban runoff.
I. Health Effects
of Toxic Metals (mercury, lead, cadmium, chromium, copper,
nickel, etc.)
1. The levels of the toxic metals- mercury,
lead, cadmium, copper, selenium, arsenic, zinc, and nickel are increasing
cumulatively in the environment due to atmospheric emissions from
human activities (1.9,2,2.1,16.3,1). Mercury, lead, cadmium,
nickel, and manganese are now being deposited through atmospheric emissions in
many areas at levels toxic to humans, as well as to other animals and
plants. The average annual percent increase in emissions of
these metals has ranged from 1.5% to 5% (2), with accumulation in soils and
plants in some industrial areas of the U.S. and Europe doubling in between 3 to
10 years and in many cases reaching levels known to cause critical health
problems. Studies of human bones have found a 500- fold increase in
the levels of toxic metals such as lead currently as opposed
to preindustrial times. A large British study
(15.1) found a statistically highly significant, age related increase in the
levels of toxic metals (aluminum, mercury, arsenic, cadmium, lead) accumulating
in the British population, as measured in hair, blood, and sweat samples.
Increasing body burdens of these toxic metals have been found to be widely
accumulating in industrial country populations throughout life, with
increasingly significant adverse health effects due to this accumulation
as populations age. Brain function and kidney function are
being especially adversely affected in large segments of the population of
industrial countries over 40 years of age.
There has been a large increase in depression,
impulsivity, and dementia in the U.S. since 1945 (5,15.1) and toxic metals
such as lead, mercury, and cadmium have been found to adversely affect levels
of brain neurotransmitters resulting in these conditions (3.1,9.3,9.7,15.1,5,1.8).
A study in China found that toxic metal exposure appears to be a significant
factor in Schizophrenia (69). Studies have found that
mercury
is often a factor in
schizophrenia
,
depression
,
mood disorders, etc.
Nutritional deprivation in the early stage of life increases
the risk of developing schizophrenia(69b). Oxidative stress, disturbed thinking
and irrational behavior which are common to schizophrenic patients may be a
result of changes in the levels of certain essential trace metals. A study
found Pb, Cd and Cr were significantly raised in newly diagnosed drug free
schizophrenic patients compared with controls. (60b) Fe and Se were
significantly reduced in newly diagnosed and medicated-schizophrenic patients
compared with controls.
Mercury and other toxic metals block an enzyme needed to digest
gluten in wheat products and casein in most cow’s milk products. The result is formation
of
gluteomorphins
and
caseomorphins
,
which act like morphine and
contributes to autism, schizophrenia, and ADHD
. Detoxification of toxic
metals and avoidance of products with gluten (wheat) and casein (milk) was
found to be the
two most effective
treatments
in a large survey of parents of autistic children by the Autism
Research Institute, and likewise for other related conditions such as ADHD,
depression
, mood disorders, schizophrenia.
A study (72)
used data from 389 mothers and
children in a prospective pregnancy and birth cohort study. They defined mean
prenatal
mercury
concentration as the mean of total whole
blood
mercury
concentrations in
maternal samples collected at 16- and 26-weeks of gestation, delivery, and
neonatal cord blood samples and assessed parent-reported child behavior up to
five times from two to 8 years of age using the Behavioral Assessment System
for Children (BASC-2)
. A 2-fold increase in
mercury
concentrations
at 16-
weeks
gestation was associated with 0.83
point (95% CI: 0.05, 1.62) higher BASC-2 anxiety scores. Maternal and cord
blood
mercury
concentrations at
delivery were associated with parent-reported anxiety at 8 years.
Coal ash, generated from
coal combustion, is composed of small particles containing metals and other
elements, such as metalloids. Components of coal
ash include heavy metals like lead, mercury, and arsenic. A
study assessed health effects of living close to a coal ash site
(73). Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, gastrointestinal
problems, difficulty falling asleep, frequent night awakenings, teeth grinding,
and complaint of leg cramps were significantly greater in the children living
near coal ash. The odds of allergies excluding
asthma, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder,
gastrointestinal problems, difficulty falling asleep, frequent night awakenings,
sleep talking, and complaint of leg cramps were greater in children living near
coal ash compared to children not living near coal ash (non-exposed). Several
components of coal ash, such as heavy metals like lead, mercury, and
arsenic, may be associated with health and sleep problems in children.
A study of
student�s
levels of toxic metals found that diet pattern affects the level of toxic
metals (70a).
Dietary patterns were
defined using factor loading scores for 108 foods from a Semi-Quantitative Food
Frequency Questionnaire. A high blood Hg level was found in boys with a high
score in the 'fish' pattern, and in girls with a high score in 'fruit' pattern.
The concentration of Pb was related to the 'imprudent' pattern in
high school boys. The effect of the 'vegetable' pattern on high excretion of
urinary Cd was observed in low grade elementary and middle school students, and
the effect of the 'fruit' pattern on the urinary Cd was observed in high grade
elementary school students. Another study (70b) concluded that: considering the
serious contamination of some samples of raw and pasteurized milk by
Cd, Pb and Zn, a control of heavy metals content during the
whole production processing of milk must be applied. Oxidative stress (OS) is
an important consequence of exposure to toxic metals. A study (70c)
of Uruguayan school children found that arsenic concentrations were
positively associated with 8-OHdG concentrations, a marker for oxidative
stress. In sum, even at low-level, Arsenic exposure is associated with
detectable oxidative damage to the DNA.
2. The U.S. Center for
Disease Control ranks toxic metals as the number one environmental health
threat to children, adversely affecting millions of children in the U.S. each
year and thousands in Florida (1.7,2.3,1). According to an EPA/ATSDR
assessment, the toxic metals lead, mercury, and arsenic are the top 3 toxics
having the most adverse health effects on the public based on toxicity and
current exposure levels in the U.S. (1,9.3), with cadmium, chromium and nickel
also highly listed. A National Academy of
Sciences Report (65) found that 50% of U.S. pregnancies result in birth
defects or neurological conditions or other chronic developmental problems.
Researchers have documented that the majority of these are due to toxic exposures
(5,7.5,14,5,14.7,1.8, etc.) According to studies reviewed, over 16%
of all children in the U.S. have had their learning ability (
ADHD
, dyslexia,
autism
,
learning disabilities
) significantly adversely affected by toxic metals such as
lead, mercury, and cadmium; and over 60% of children in some urban areas
have been adversely affected (1.7,5,6,9,15.1,46,47). The toxic metals have
been documented to be reproductive and developmental toxins, causing birth
defects and damaging fetal development, as well as neurological effects,
developmental delays, learning disabilities, and behavioral abnormalities in many
otherwise normal-appearing children
(5,6,7.5,9.1,9.3,9.7,19,46,47,1.8). Other neurological
disorders are also increasing, partly due to exposure of millions of American
workers to neurotoxic substances such as toxic metals
and pesticides (15.1).
3. Lead poisoning is the most prevalent
environmental disease in the U.S along with mercury
toxicity. According to an EPA survey, over 10% of all Americans and
over 20% of all black children under 2 carry unsafe levels of lead in their
bodies (over 10 mcg/dl) (9). In an urban east coast area, almost
half of children tested in 1998 had lead levels exceeding the federal blood
levels guideline (54).
In a study of Inuit children, cord
blood mercury concentrations were associated with higher
TeacherReportForm
(TRF) symptom scores for attention
problems and
DisruptiveBehaviorDisorders
(DBD)
scores consistent with ADHD. Current blood Pb concentrations were
associated with higher TRF symptom scores for externalizing problems and with
symptoms of ADHD (hyperactive-impulsive type) based on the
DBD(
7.5d).
Lead is a leading cause of birth
defects, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, neurological disease, kidney
disease, learning disability, retardation, tooth cavities, etc. (2‑3,5,6
bc,8‑9,15.1,28,41). An increased lead burden of 5 ug/L in the
blood corresponded to an increase in cavities of 80% (41). Lead also has
been shown to depress the immune system and increase cancer rates
(1.3,9).
Metal genotoxicity is
caused by indirect mechanisms (49).
The
three predominant
mechanisms of cancer causality by toxic metals are: (1) interference with
cellular redox regulation and induction of oxidative stress, which may cause
oxidative DNA damage or trigger signaling cascades leading to stimulation of
cell growth; (2) inhibition of major DNA repair systems resulting in genomic
instability and accumulation of critical mutations; (3) deregulation of cell
proliferation by induction of signaling pathways or inactivation of growth
controls such as tumor suppressor genes. In addition, specific metal compounds
exhibit unique mechanisms such as interruption of cell-cell adhesion by
cadmium, direct DNA binding of trivalent chromium, and interaction of vanadate
with phosphate binding sites of protein phosphatases. The toxic metals mercury,
cadmium, arsenic, nickel, and lead have been documented to cause or be a factor
in causing
many types of cancer
.
Studies have shown most have toxic metal accumulations and test with detox is
appropriate and useful in recovering health. (9.6)
Federal studies indicate that exposure to
lead in the environment reduces the IQ of hundreds of thousands of U.S.
children each year and causes pregnancy complications to over 500,000 U.S.
women each year (2.3, 2.3). Children aged 7 to 11 with high
levels of lead in their bones were found to exhibit much higher levels of
attention problems, aggressive/violent behavior, and delinquency than those
with lower levels (5).
Nanoparticles affect immune functions, causing different
immune responses. Study data showed a statistically significant increased level
of the pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-α in serum in both exposed industry groups
compared with office workers, as well as a higher level of TNF-α in workers
from the woodworking company compared with the metalworking employees(9c). We
found an elevated level of IL-6 in the exposed groups as well as an elevated
level of IL-8 in the nasal lavage in woodworking employees after work.
A one-year sampling campaign of road dusts was
carried out at 10 distinct sites in the broader area of the city of
Thessaloniki, Greece and concentrations of heavy metals (HMs) along
with magnetic susceptibility were evaluated(9d). Non-exhaust vehicular
emissions, oil/fuel combustion and industrial activities as major sources of
heavy metals accounted for approximately 73% of the total variance.
Concentration peaks in the urban cluster were observed for Cd, Mn, and Ni
coinciding with the port area. Based on multiple pollution indices, a severe
polluted area was revealed, while potential ecological risk index (RI)
indicated a high potential ecological risk with Cd being regarded as the
pollutant of high concern. The health risk assessment model indicated ingestion
as the major exposure pathway. For both adults and children,
Cr
and Pb had the highest risk values,
mainly recorded in the
urban cluster underscoring the need of potential measures to reduce road dust in
urban environments(9d).
�Mercury also has been documented to
cause,
cardiovascular
disease,
neurological
disease,
and
other conditions
.� Study
results suggest that
angiotensin II
AT-1 receptors upregulation might play a key role in the vascular damage
induced by Hg exposure- by increasing oxidative stress and probably by reducing
NO bioavailability (38b). A study found
prolonged intake of heavy
metals (cobalt, cadmium and mercury) leads to the development of marked
hemodynamic disturbances, combined with a sharp increase in the level of lipid
peroxidation products in the blood(38c). Melatonin under intoxication by
heavy metals significantly reduced hypertensive effect of heavy metals on
systemic hemodynamics, which
together with a reduction of lipid
peroxidation processes allows one to consider the activation of lipid peroxidation
as one of the major pathogenic factors in the development of hemodynamic
disorders in conditions of heavy metal poisoning.
Drinking
water is a major source of lead in humans according to
EPA. Other major sources are lead in old
paint, lead solder in cans, lead in soils from previous gasoline exhaust, lead
emissions from incinerators, and lead in food chain (1.2). EPA
studies show that hundreds of thousands of school children are being exposed to
dangerous levels of lead in drinking water from fountains at U.S. schools
(2.3, 2.3). Levels from gasoline exhaust and cans have decreased in
the
U.S., but
are still extremely high in
some other countries.
Studies
have confirmed lead in drinking water is a major problem in Florida
(2.3). Millions of people are exposed to dangerous levels of lead
and other toxic metals through home drinking water which has absorbed lead or
other toxic metals from pipes, solder
joints,brass
fixtures, etc.
according to EPA
(2.3,2.6). An EPA drinking water survey (2.3, 2.8) found that
the average lead level in drinking water in many areas of Florida was
above the EPA drinking water standard of 15 parts per
billion(
parts
per billion(ppb)., a level high enough to cause significant health effects. Counties
with a significant number of homes above the EPA standard were Escambia,
Brevard, Volusia, Lee, Broward, and Dade.
4. Lead has been shown
to be one of the most potent promoters of cancer and birth defects (2.2,
9). In a Swiss study of residents living on a busy roadside, a group
of residents having free blood lead removed by calcium EDTA treatment was
compared to a control group that did not. 17% of those not having
lead
removed died of cancer while only 1.7% of those
having lead removed died of cancer
(2.1).
A
Boston area study found lead to be a potent promoter of birth defects. The
study suggests that as much as 46% of all birth defects in the area
were facilitated by or related to level of lead in the blood of the
fetus. Low levels of lead were found to promote birth defects, with
a blood lead level of 6.3 micrograms per deciliter(mcg/dl) being associated
with an 87% increase of birth defects. A blood lead level of 15
mcg/dl had a 137% higher risk of birth defects relative to the group with
less than 0.7 mcg/dl (9). (1
mcg/dl=10ppb)
Toxic
metal exposures have been found to commonly cause miscarriages, stillbirths, spontaneous
abortions, and infertility (42,46). A study of African countries found that
high levels of the toxic metals mercury, cadmium, lead, arsenic, and chromium
caused higher miscarriage and stillbirth rates(42c).
In Nigeria(42c), pregnant women with high lead
levels (BLL>25 ug/dL) had a 42% higher risk of miscarriage than those with lower
lead levels, and similar for Egypt. High cadmium levels resulted in an 84%
increase in miscarriage risk and 9.5% higher risk for high mercury levels compared
to those with lower levels. Similar higher risk levels were also found in other
countries.
Cadmium has also been
found to be a promoter of sperm abnormalities, birth defects, uterine fibroids,
infertility, spontaneous abortions (1.5,3,42,46,51), lung and brain cancer
(40,49,40), and peripheral neuropathy. (56)
Epidemiological studies have shown that there exists a correlation
between cadmium exposure and human cancers(40a). The evidence that cadmium and
cadmium compounds are probable human carcinogens is also supported by experimental
studies reporting induction of malignant tumors formation in multiple species
of laboratory animals exposed to these compounds. In vitro studies with
mammalian cells have also shown that cadmium is clastogenic. Study results
indicate that
metallothioneins
and heat
shock proteins appear to be excellent candidates for biomarkers for detecting
cadmium-induced proteotoxic effects at the molecular and cellular levels (40a).
5. Studies reviewed
suggest that exposure to toxic metals may account for as least 23% of learning
disabilities, 20% of all strokes and heart attacks, and in some areas be a
factor in over 40% of all birth defects. Primary exposure to lead is from
drinking water, auto and industrial emissions, and lead in
paint. Cadmium, mercury, chromium, arsenic, silver, copper, and
aluminum are other metals to which Floridians are commonly exposed in drinking
water or the food system (3).
Arsenic exposures
are very common and cause numerous types of toxic
harm.
A comprehensive analysis
of published data indicates that arsenic exposure induces cardiovascular
diseases, developmental abnormalities, neurologic and neurobehavioral
disorders, diabetes, hearing loss, hematologic disorders, and various types of
cancer (50). Recent reports have pointed out that arsenic poisoning appears to
be one of the major public health problems of pandemic nature. Acute and
chronic exposure to arsenic has been reported in several countries of the world
where a large proportion of drinking water (groundwater) is contaminated with
high concentrations of arsenic. Research has also pointed significantly higher
standardized mortality rates for cancers of the bladder, kidney, skin, liver,
and colon in many areas of arsenic pollution (50). Arsenic is often found at
high levels in drinking water (50b).
6.
A study showed that
developmental
lead
(Pb) exposure since fetal period can cause
lasting impairments in physiological parameters. The intermittent
lead
exposure
causes adverse health effects,
i.e
,
hypertension, increased respiratory frequency and chemoreflex sensitivity,
baroreflex impairment, anxiety, decreased synaptic activity, neuroinflammation
and reactive gliosis, in some ways similar to a permanent exposure, however
some are lower-grade due to the shorter duration of
exposure(
4.5a).
In a large national study,
blood
lead
levels (BLL) were significantly correlated with higher systolic BP among black
men and women, but not white or
Mexican-American
participants. BLLs were significantly associated with higher diastolic BPs
among white men and women and black
men(
4.5b). Black
men in the 90th percentile of
blood
lead distribution� compared to
black men in the 10th percentile of
blood
lead distribution had a significant increase of risk of having
hypertension. In addition,
blood
cadmium
was significantly associated with hypertension
and systolic and diastolic
blood
.
Researchers at the U.S. Public Health Service
and at Harvard Univ. have found that blood pressure in men increases
significantly at 20 mcg/dl blood level compared to 10 mcg/dl
(4.5).
Another study found a linear relation
between elevated blood lead and blood pressure down to 7 mcg/dl
(4.5). Other studies have also found both lead and
cadmium to be significant causes of high blood pressure, heart
attacks, and stroke (4.5 & 3). Another large national study (4.5e)
found
BLL was associated with
systolic BP in non-Hispanic whites and with hypertension and systolic and
diastolic BP in non-Hispanic blacks. BLL was not associated with BP outcomes in
Mexican Americans. Non-Hispanic white ALAD2 gene carriers in the highest BLL
quartile (3.852.9 microg/dL) had a significantly higher adjusted prevalence
odds ratio for hypertension compared with ALAD1 homozygous individuals. The
study also found a significant interaction between lead concentration and the
ALAD2 allele in non-Hispanic whites and non-Hispanic blacks in relation to
systolic BP.
7. A study of school children
in Maryland found that both lead and cadmium had significant impacts on
learning ability. The group of children labeled gifted by teachers all had low
levels of blood lead, while all children with blood lead levels of
50 ppm or more were in the very low achiever group. There was a very
high correlation between blood lead level and achievement group
(5). These results were also confirmed by a
recent
medical studies
published in The New England Journal
of Medicine (6) and other studies (2.6,5,6,15.1,46,47).
8. Exposure to the 5
heavy metals tested for in a study of school children accounted for 23% of the
variation in test scores for reading, spelling and visual motor skills
(6,15.1). A Canadian study found that blood levels of five metals were able
to predict with a 98% accuracy which children were learning disabled
(7). Animals exposes to a very low-dose mixture of six metals displayed
severe growth retardation and other abnormalities in the exposed fetuses,
indicating a synergistic effect of the metals in combination (10.8,19.5).
9. Medical studies have
shown that low levels of lead in the blood of infants (as low as 6 mcg/dl)
have significant effects on
mental
development and learning ability
. An average level of 14.6 mcg/dl had
serious impacts
( 8
, 8, 8, 2.6,5).
10. There is a
significant correlation between maternal blood lead level with birth weight and
early learning ability. Adverse effects were found as low as 8 micrograms
per deciliter (9 & 9.5 & 2.6).
11. A study of
14 to 19 year-olds
found that the amount of lead in the
blood was the most important factor in hearing threshold levels in
children. Levels as low as 10 micrograms per deciliter had a
significant effect and there was no threshold level (8). The lead
blood level also was found to be a significant factor in the age at which a
child first sat up, walked, and spoke (8); as well as being related to
reductions in height of children (4.5).
12. A review
of studies involving cadmium suggest cadmium is as effective as lead
at causing high blood pressure and heart disease. Likewise, cadmium
has been found to produce learning disabilities and mental retardation in
children much like lead, as well as causing kidney damage (46d,40c), sperm
abnormalities, and sterility in men
(2,3,6,1.2,15.1,42b,47-51,46d). One study (53) found a
significant correlation between hair cadmium level and sporadic ALS
(53). Cadmium has also been found to bioaccumulate in the food chain
and to be reaching dangerous levels in shellfish and animals (28,3.3,1.2).
Cadmium has been found to be widely distributed in sediments of Florida's bays
and estuaries (3.3), Cd is acutely toxic to marine life at sediment levels as
low as 6.9 parts per trillion (parts per trillion(ppt) (3.3). Cadmium also
appears to be an endocrine system disrupter and to cause other biological harm
at lower levels (14.5). The FDEP NOEL (no observed effects level) is 1
part per million (ppm). The FDEP PEL (probable effects
level-lower limit of range associated with adverse biological effects) for
cadmium is 7.5 ppm. Cadmium levels is sediments of 4 harbor
areas in the Indian River Lagoon were found to be .6 to .8 ppm, with much
higher levels in several urban coastal areas (3.3,3.3). The U.S. EPA
(36c) toxics criterion for cadmium in seafood used in coastal monitoring
programs is 0.5 ppm. The FDEP NOEL for lead in sediments is
21 ppm and the PEL is 160 ppm, which are also exceeded in some
areas of Florida. The EPA toxics contaminant criteria for lead in seafood
is 0.5 ppm. The FDEP NOEL for copper of 28 ppm and for
chromium of 33 ppm are also exceeded in many areas of
Florida. The PEL for copper and chromium respectively are
170 ppm and 240 ppm (3.3). The EPA contaminant criteria for
copper in seafood is 15 ppm and for chromium is 1ppm. The
EPA criteria for zinc is 60 ppm.
13. European studies
have found a correlation between long‑term air exposure to cadmium levels in
industrialized urban areas with lowered kidney function
(12,15.1). Hundreds of thousands of people suffer from serious kidney
dysfunction due to cadmium (2,15.1). As a result of research
carried out by the Danish National Agency of Environmental Protection, the EEC
Council of Environmental Ministers has concluded that present environmental
levels of cadmium are potentially harmful, with harmful levels of cadmium
accumulating in the lungs, bone tissue, brain, and kidneys
(44). Cadmium (and mercury) has been found to be a major cause of
neurological dysfunction such as Alzheimer's disease and
other
dementia (15.1, 5,9.7). Cadmium has also been shown to be
toxic to the testes and sperm at fairly low levels and to damage the placenta,
which can cause damage or death to the fetus (9.8,46).
Urinary cadmium (U-Cd) has been associated with decreased
peripheral bone mineral density (BMD) and osteoporosis(52a). In a large sample
of the U.S. population, women >or= 50 years of age with U-Cd levels between
0.50 and 1.00 microg/g creatinine were at 43% greater risk for hip-BMD-defined
osteoporosis, relative to those with levels <or= 0.50 microg/g.
A study (52b) found
a significant interaction between cadmium and
menopause (p = 0.022). The results suggest negative effects of low-level
cadmium exposure on bone, possibly exerted via increased bone resorption, which
seemed to be intensified after menopause.
Significant
levels of cadmium have been found in the German food system. Sweden has
instituted a ban on many uses of cadmium such as for paint pigment, and other
European countries are considering such bans (3). Japanese studies
indicate the lungs, gastrointestinal system, and kidneys are especially
susceptible to cadmium poisoning. A daily intake of 200 ug of
cadmium was found to significantly increase kidney damage in humans. Normal
intake in diet is 50 to 80 ug (13). Cadmium from combustion emissions is
also accumulating in coastal estuaries and inland
water-body
sediments,
and is widespread in shellfish and other organisms. Cadmium is toxic
at relatively low levels and has serious impacts on the organisms in water
bodies that accumulate cadmium (4,1.2).
14. The
heavy metals (lead, mercury, cadmium) tend to concentrate in the air and
in the food chain, facilitating metal poisoning which is the most widespread
environmental disorder in the U.S. These heavy metals have also been
found to be endocrine systems disrupting chemicals having effects on the
endocrine and reproductive systems similar to the organochlorine chemicals
(14,14.5,5). Estrogenic chemicals like mercury have been found in Florida
wildlife at levels that feminized males to the extent of not being able to
reproduce, and also had adverse effects on the female reproductive systems. Chromium
is also on the EPA Special Health Hazard Substance List because it is "a
cancer-causing agent and a mutagen"(1.1,51). Lungs & throat
are especially affected. (11.7& 1.1).
The soluble hexavalent chromium Cr (VI) is an
environmental contaminant widely recognized to act as a carcinogen, mutagen and
teratogen towards humans and animals. The fate of chromium in the environment
is dependent on its oxidation state. Hexavalent chromium primarily enters the
cells and undergoes metabolic reduction to trivalent chromium, resulting in the
formation of reactive oxygen species together with oxidative tissue damage and
a cascade of cellular events (51).
15.
"The neurotoxicity of alkylmetals such as
mercury
represents
a major environmental health problem which should be of international
concern."(1.7-1.9,9.3,9.7,17a,1,63) Mercury is found in 3 different
forms: elemental mercury vapor, inorganic mercury compounds, and organic
mercury. The organic methyl mercury form bioaccumulates to
very high levels in the food chain and readily crosses the brain membrane where
it can do severe irreversible damage (11,28,9.3,9.7,15.1,17a,
1.2). Fish and seafood are common sources of mercury in people, but other
sources of elemental mercury also result in methyl mercury since it is commonly methylated by
bacteria and yeasts in the mouth and intestines to methyl mercury
(1.8).
Dental mercury amalgam
( silver
) fillings are the
number one source
of mercury in most who have amalgam
fillings, (1.8,1.7) but this is also the largest source of methyl mercury for
many people since oral bacteria methylate inorganic mercury to methylmercury. .
Exposure levels for those with amalgam fillings commonly exceed
Gov�t
health guidelines (1.8,1.7,1.2,), which is
0.2 ug/M3 for mercury vapor. Thousands also get harmful exposure levels
from occupational exposure such as working in dental offices
(1.8). Inhaled metallic mercury vapor is able to diffuse much more
extensively into blood cells and various tissues
than inorganic mercury (57,1.8). Approx. 70% of
methyl mercury in consumed fish or food is absorbed and retained in the body.
The
Gov�t
health guideline for organic
mercury is 0.1 ug Hg /kg body weight (1.7). Mercury
has been extensively documented to have serious adverse health effects
including brain and neurological damage, kidney failure, birth defects,
learning disabilities, depression, impulsivity, etc.
(1.2,1.7,1.8,3,5,6,9.7,14.7,15.1,17a,17,19,63). Mercury has been
found to adversely affect the brain's neurotransmitter uptake of serotonin,
dopamine, acetylcholine, and norepinephrine which control the
body's neurologic functions (1.8,14.7). Low serotonin
levels have been shown to result in depression, anger, anxiety, aggression,
violence, insomnia, obesity, sexual deviance, and other impulse
disorders.
Epidemiological studies have found that human embryos are highly
susceptible to brain damage from prenatal exposure to mercury
(7.5,9.7,5,1.8,63). Levels in the fetus are usually higher than the blood level
of the mother, and significant levels of mercury are often found
in breast milk (7.5,9.2f,44b,1.8). Normal levels in breast milk range up to
1.0 ug/L Cd, 5 ug/L Pb, and 1.7 ug/L Hg, but
levels above this are commonly found.
Cadmium and mercury
was
detected in
100% and lead in 87% of breast milk samples from Norwegian mothers (7.5e).
Maternal seafood intake alone explained 10% of variance in mercury exposure,
while together with amalgam fillings explained 46% of variance in Hg
concentration in breast milk. For Hg concentration in breast milk,
number of
amalgam fillings
and high fish consumption were significant predictors of
mercury level.
ATSDR staff recommend screening levels for dangerous effects of
5 ug/l Cd, 20 ug/L Pb, and
3.5 ug/L Hg(44b). Mercury has also been documented to
cause cellular DNA damage and cancer in animal studies (19b). Mercury has
been documented to be causing serious harm to birds, animals, and humans
(2,14.5,14.7,17a,17.4,18,19b, 28,33,1.8). Native Americans eating
fish on a regular basis have been found to have serious health effects. Over
100 Japanese died and many more were seriously affected neurologically where
infants suffered mental retardation, severe cerebral
palsy, incoordination, weakness, seizures, vision loss, etc. after eating
fish contaminated with 10 to 20 parts per million(ppm) methyl mercury (about
1000 micrograms per 1/4 pound serving) (9.4,18). A large cohort study of
occupationally exposed women found an increased risk of spontaneous abortion
and other pregnancy complications (7.5).
The World
Health Organization maximum safe level for human ingestion was based mostly on
acute toxicity and is 30 micrograms per day. The ATSDR/EPA MRL amounts to
between 3 to 7 micrograms per day (9.3,1.7,1.8). The average U.S.
average human intake for those with amalgam fillings is over 10 micrograms per
day, but most with several fillings have excretion levels of about 30
micrograms per day, and a study of a group in New York eating more than the
average amount of fish found many ingesting over 40 micrograms per
day. The Minnesota Dept. of Health recommends limiting the intake of
mercury to 15 micrograms per week, but this level is commonly
exceeded. Studies have shown Floridians eat more fish on average
than the amounts assumed in setting standards and most Gulf Coast saltwater
fish have levels of mercury above government health standards and levels
documented to often cause adverse health effects(17a).
Mercury Health and
Wildlife Standards
:
The FDEP NOEL for
mercury of .1 ppm is also widely exceeded. The FDEP PEL for mercury
is 1.4 ppm. The FDA action level for mercury in seafood is 1
ppm( 59
). The historic U.S. EPA mercury
wildlife guideline, adopted by most states including Florida, is
12 nanograms per Liter(ng/L) (1.5)
The mercury health
standard to protect human life is 0.3 parts per million(ppm) in
fish and shellfish
and 7.9 ng/L
for rivers and 3.5 ng/L for lakes under default water
conditions. The EPA mercury wildlife standard (adopted only for
the Great Lakes and tributaries) is 1.3 ng/L and the corresponding human
health criteria is 3.1 ng/L (1.3).
(16) Tin,
thallium, platinum, and gold can also be methylated in water bodies
and sediments to very toxic methyl forms. The extremely toxic tin
compound used in marine paints, tributyltin, was found at levels above the
EPA toxics criteria (TBT>1ppb) in 39% of Fla. Gulf Coast
sediments tested (36c). In addition, the metalloids arsenic,
selenium, and tellurium can be converted to volatile products of
extreme toxicity (11,3.3). The EPA contaminant criteria
for selenium is 1ppm. For silver, the sediment NOEL is 0.5, which is
exceeded in some parts of the state (3.3), and the PEL is 2.5.
Arsenic is on the EPA Special Health Hazard List because it is a
potent Class A carcinogen in humans (1.2,11.7), as well as
being neurotoxic. An EPA study of cancer incidence for different levels of
arsenic in drinking water found a dose related response for all types
of cancer (11.3). The cancer rate for people with drinking water levels of
above .6 parts per million arsenic were approx. 3 times those for
people drinking water below .3 ppm arsenic, with large increases in
cancers of internal organs. According to U.S. EPA it also causes
birth defects, learning disabilities, damage to bone marrow, and other
health problems., and new studies estimate that drinking water
contaminated with arsenic at the current federal limit poses a 1 percent
lifetime risk of cancer- about the same as radon or tobacco smoke
(1.2,1.6). EPA staff have proposed lowering the drinking
water standard for arsenic substantially to 3 to 5 parts per
billion. Arsenic is acutely toxic to marine organisms but also has
other effects at lower levels including growth retardation and
reproductive failure (3.3). Arsenic is widely distributed in sediments in
some areas of Florida and bioaccumulates in the food chain.
The FDEP NOEL (no observed effect level) for arsenic is 8 ppm. The
FDEP sediment PEL is 64 ppm. The EPA contaminant criteria
(36c) for arsenic in seafood is 2 ppm.
17. Aluminum
is neurotoxic and appears to be a cause of Alzheimer's disease and
other neurological disorders (15.1). Yale Univ.
researchers found that a population of elderly with high aluminum levels had a
much greater incidence of neuropsychiatric deficits, including poor
memory and impaired visual motor coordination. A study in
Great Britain found that Alzheimer's disease was 50% higher in water districts
where the aluminum concentration in drinking water exceeded .11 mg/liter
compared to districts with less than .01 mg/
liter(
15,15.1). Similar
findings are available for most developed countries, including the
U.S. Aluminum has also been shown to cause learning disabilities
in children (15.1). The rate of American's reported
dying from Alzheimer's disease has increased 1000% in the last decade (a
portion of this increase may be due to increased doctor awareness)
(15). Americans are widely exposed to aluminum through food
and medicines, as well as breathing wind- blown aluminum particulates
(along with other toxic metals) (15.1). Yale Univ. researchers
estimate that over 100,000 deaths due to metallic pollution particulates occur
in the U.S. each year, and such particulate pollution is increasing in many
areas. Investigators found that the constituent metals and their
bioavailability determine the acute inflammatory response of PM samples in
lung tissue (30.5).
Aluminum is
widely dispersed in soils and is a major factor in the adverse effects on fish
and wildlife in acidified lakes (1.2e).
18. A significant
positive correlation was found between the level of nickel in drinking water
and the rate of bladder and lung cancer in men. The higher the
level of nickel in drinking water, the higher the cancer rate (16.1). Nickel
carbonyl is extremely toxic and is formed when nickel is burned in the
presence of carbon monoxide. Chronic low- level exposure can cause serious
lung damage, birth defects, kidney disease, lung cancer, etc.
(16.1,16.3,28,1.2). Beryllium which is released in fossil fuel combustion
is highly toxic; chronic inhalation exposure can cause lung degeneration, lung
cancer, adrenal gland and immune system impairment, etc. (1.2)
The Federal safety
standard is 2 micrograms per cubic meter of air, but some
exposed at levels
lower than this have had serious lung damage.
19. High levels of
copper over long periods can damage the brain, kidneys, cornea,
etc. Copper levels in drinking water (from copper pipes) exceeding
EPA standards were found in several Florida counties including: Orange,
Seminole, Pasco, Duval, and Hillsboro (16a). Chromium
is neurotoxic and a class A human carcinogen (EPA,1.2).
20. Vanadium and beryllium have been shown to
cause acute and chronic respiratory disease, as well as causing other serious
health problems including cancer (28,29,29.4,29.2). Vanadium, an important
pollutant produced from anthropogenic activities, has been suggested to be
embryotoxic and fetotoxic in animal studies(29a). A study of a large group of
women in China (the Healthy Baby Cohort) was used to assess
the association of prenatal exposure to vanadium with the risk of
adverse birth outcomes in babies
.
Urinary Ln-vanadium concentrations
were linearly associated with the risk of early-term delivery (linear,
p<0.0001) and being small for gestational age (linear, p=0.0027), with
adjusted ORs of 1-15 for early-term delivery and 1.12 for being small
for gestational age per unit increase in Ln-vanadium concentrations. The
findings reveal a relationship between prenatal exposure to higher levels of
vanadium and increased risk of adverse birth outcomes.
Vanadium causes
lung damage and inflammation by several mechanisms, including damage to
pulmonary alveolar, interruption of cytokine function, altered macrophage
and
Ifn
response, etc. (29.2,32b,29.2) -
resulting in lung damage lung infections, bronchopulmonary disease,
asthma, and lowered resistance to infectious microorganisms. Vanadium is
also cytotoxic causing extensive cell death through toxic
accumulation and free radical inducement (29.5). Vanadium also causes
extensive DNA damage in cells and is a reproductive and
developmental toxin (29.5b), as well as a proven carcinogen (29.4,30.2). Vanadium
is a major factor in lung damage caused by PM10 particulates in oil fly ash
air pollution (29,32).
Thallium
intoxication is characterized by the development of painful peripheral
neuropathy, alopecia(61c), mental disorders, and in severe cases, respiratory
failure and death (61). Toxic optic neuropathy is also a feature.
Opthalmologic
features of thallium poisoning include
optic neuropathy, blepharoptosis, lens opacities,
and
opthalmoplegia
(61). Thallium is common in
coal plant emissions and phospho-
gympsum
waste
in Florida.
Vaporized
ash from burned residual oils has been shown to cause serious lung injury and
respiratory disease by causing cellular death of immune suppressor
cell macrophages (32b). Such damage by small particles in the
urban air has been found to cause over 60,000 deaths per year from
lung damage (29.2). EPA studies and other studies have
determined that toxic metals in the dust are a major factor in the induced lung
damage, and that vanadium is a particularly toxic to such macrophages in
the lung (29,29.2,30.5). Investigators found that the
constituent metals and their bioavailability determine the acute inflammatory
response of PM samples in lung tissue (30.5).
High
levels of manganese cause manganese madness and result in violent and
antisocial behavior (15.1). Studies have found a very
significant positive relationship between criminals convicted of violent crime
and the level of manganese in hair samples. Manganese has been found
to damage the male reproductive system resulting in infertility (10.2), to
damage normal hormone production, and to be toxic to the brain,
causing neurologic damage including reduced production of the brain
neurotransmitter dopamine and excess production of acetylcholine
(10.6). A population exposed to manganese in the water supply has
experienced severe neurologic and muscle control problems
(10.6).
20.5 A study results
of diabetes patients
(9.2e) showed that the mean values of Pb, Cd and, As were significantly higher
in scalp hair samples of smoker and non-smoker diabetic patients as compared to
control subjects (p<0.001). The concentration of understudy toxic metals was
also high in blood and urine samples of DM patients, but the difference was
more significant in smoker DM patients. These results are consistent with those
obtained in other studies (9.7b), confirming that toxic metals may play a role
in the development of diabetes mellitus. Studies have also shown that mercury
exposure causes
diabetes
.
Combinations of toxic metals have synergistic
effects that are associated with type 2 diabetes and other conditions (9.2a-e).
Associations between arsenic and cadmium were reported for
cardiovascular and kidney disease, type I and type II diabetes, cognitive
function, hypothyroidism, and increased prevalence and mortality for lung and
other cancers (9.2,38).
Study results demonstrated that As and Cd
exposure caused significant changes to the gut microbiome and metabolome by
affecting bile acids, amino acids and taxa associated with metabolic health
(37c). Inorganic Arsenic can increase DM risk by impairing mitochondrial
metabolism, one of the key steps in the regulation of glucose-stimulated
insulin secretion (GSIS) in pancreatic β-cells (36)
.
The results also found that Manganese, like Arsenic, may inhibit
GSIS by impairing mitochondrial function, whereas Cd may target other
mechanisms that regulate GSIS in β-cells. Impairment of hepatic glucose
homeostasis can also play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of DM. Along with
compromised function of pancreas and muscles, diminished liver and kidney
functions also contribute considerably to increase the blood glucose level.
These metals have potential to bring conformational changes in these enzymes
and make them inactive. Additionally, these metals also disturb the hormonal
balance, such as insulin, glucocorticoids and
catecholamines;
by damaging pancreas and adrenal gland, respectively. Moreover, these metals
also enhance the production of reactive oxygen species and depress the
anti-oxidative defense mechanism with subsequent disruption of multiple organs
(37). Exposure to Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (
EDCs
) during fetal or early life
can disrupt the development of both the immune system and the pancreatic beta
cells, potentially increasing susceptibility to T1DM later in life. In
addition, developmental exposure to some EDCs can affect beta cell development
and function, influencing insulin secretion. These changes may increase stress
on the beta cells and identify them as a target to the immune system.
Developmental exposure to EDCs that disrupt metabolism by increasing insulin
resistance or obesity may also stress the beta
cells. (7.7a,9.2,9.5).
Other study data indicated that
taurine
administration
could ameliorate
iAs
-induced insulin resistance
through activating PPARγ-mTORC2
signalling
and
subsequently inhibiting hepatic autophagy (7.7b).
II. Mercury in Fish and the Food Chain of Lakes and Streams and
Bays
21. Studies by
Univ. of Florida scientists have found that human activities are increasing the
quantity of mercury delivered to the atmosphere, soils, sediments, water
bodies, and food chain (17.1,1.5). Mercury accumulation rates in the
Everglades reached an average of 6.4 times higher than 1900, with most of the
increase since 1940. Atmospheric emissions are the largest source of
mercury in lakes, and the main sources of emissions are municipal incinerators,
medical waste incinerators, and coal combustion
(2,2.1,16.2-17,18,18.8,22,28,28.7,33,34,35). The rain in areas with
incinerators like Broward County has been found to be unusually high in
mercury, higher than industrial areas around Lake Michigan (21d). Some
pollution controls have been mandated for incinerators to reduce levels from
incinerators and the level of mercury in the everglades appears to be declining
some. Ozone pollution and reactive compounds containing chlorine or bromine
oxidise
elemental mercury to inorganic mercury which
is more readily
depositied
by rain
(16.3). Recent studies have found high levels of mercury in the rain
all over Florida and throughout the
U.S.(
1.5). Over
a 6- year period, Florida rain samples ranged from 1.3 nanograms/Liter
to 81.2 ng/L, depending on location and climatic considerations, with an
average of 12.6 ng/L (1.5). The level of mercury in Florida
rain sampled exceeded the EPA human health criterion for Hg in lakes in over
97% of samples. Studies by EPA and municipal sewer agencies have
also shown that sewer sludge has significant levels of mercury all over
Florida, with the main sources being dental offices and excretion by those with
amalgam dental fillings (14.9). Studies by Oak Ridge National Laboratory
for FDEP have documented that mercury in sewer sludge and landfills
is methylated to methyl mercury by soil bacteria and much of the
mercury ends up in crops if land spread and in the atmosphere and rain if not
(14.9). Thus, mercury from dental amalgam is a major source of
methyl mercury in rain. Mercury from sewers is also a significant
source of mercury in rivers, lakes, bays, and fish (14.9).
22. Mercury
in Salt-Water Fish and Shellfish
Studies document that Florida Saltwater fish and shellfish have
high levels of mercury in large parts of the state (60,16.3f,43,51,33).
There are fish consumption warnings/limits for most saltwater fish species in
all coastal and estuarine waters (43) and for most larger freshwater fish
species in many water bodies (43
).There
a also
fish advisory limits for dioxin, PCBs, pesticides, heavy metals other than
mercury, and saxitoxin in some Florida water bodies(43). �Some
areas such as North Florida Bay and offshore Tampa Bay have had test levels
higher than most other areas (60). Based on the tests that have been
done, five saltwater species(king mackerel, black grouper,
florida
smoothhound
, great
white shark, tilefish) have average mercury levels on tested samples higher
than the FDA action level of 1 part per million (ppm) for fish (60,16.3f,51);
17 species have average mercury test levels above the FDA warning
level(0.5 ppm) for mercury in fish(barracuda, black
drum, blacktip shark, bluefish, bonefish, bonnethead shark,
bull shark, cobia, snook, greater amberjack, jack crevalle, ladyfish,
lemon shark, red
drum,rock
bass,
spanish
mackeral
, spotted
bass, stone crab) , and 16 species of fish (blacknose shark, blue
crab,
gafftopsail
catfish, gag grouper,
grouper, gulf flounder, permit, red grouper, sand
trout, sheepshead, silver seatrout, southern flounder, tarpon,
tripletail, white bass, yellow bass, yellow jack), as well as crabs, oysters
and shrimp have average test levels near the warning level or some that tested
above the FDA action level(60,51) and all were above the EPA health criterion
of 0.3ppp (1.6). All of these have average levels of mercury above the U.S. EPA
health criterion for methylmercury of 0.3 ppm
(1.6). Studies (22.5) have also found that the level in most large
predator species on the Gulf Coast is higher than levels found to adversely
affect health (66,67) with mercury contamination being pervasive along the
whole coastal area, and that people who eat Gulf Coast fish at least once per
week usually have dangerous levels of mercury (16.3). 29% of a coastal sample
from Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi ate fish at least once per week
(16.3). Several studies including a large CDC study have found
those with higher levels of mercury have higher rates of
neurological problems,
cardiovascular proble
ms, infertility, and
cancer
(66,67,41,1.8,27,14.7). Another
study found infertile couples were significantly more likely to have elevated
mercury levels than the infertile couples, which was the case for both men (35
percent versus 15 percent) and women (23 percent versus 4
percent). Furthermore, patients who reported eating high
levels of seafood showed a clear trend towards elevated mercury levels (67
a,f
), as did those with
several
mercury amalgam dental fillings
. A California health clinic study reports that of a California
population that eats at least 2 servings of fish per week, 89% had levels
of mercury in the blood exceeding 5 micrograms per liter(ug/L), the level considered
the safety limit for mercury by U.S. EPA and the National Academy of
Sciences(67a). Over 50% had levels over
10 ug/L and 15% had levels over 20 ug/L. The
group had chronic health effects including depression, loss of scalp hair,
metallic taste, headaches, arthritic pain in joints, irritability,
tremors, and numbness and tingling in hands and feet. She also described
cognitive problems such as pronounced memory loss, confusion and difficulties
in talking. In some cases, those problems were so severe they interfered with
the ability to earn a living or attend school. In all cases, health effects
improved after several months of avoiding eating fish. Some
women in the group were found to have transferred excessive mercury to their
infants solely through their breast milk. One breast-fed baby had three times
the EPA's safe level for mercury by the time he was 4 months old; and another
had 4 times the EPA safe level at 19 months. Some of the infants
with high mercury levels suffered severe neurological problems such as
autism, and
improved when treated for mercury
toxicity.
The Mobile Register studies (16.3) have also found that fish
and shellfish that feed near offshore oil and gas platforms have significantly
higher levels of mercury than other areas (16.3) due to mercury used in
drilling. Over 200 tons of mercury has been added to the Gulf through drilling
over the last 30 years. More fishing occurs near such platforms since shellfish
and fish tend to congregate in such areas. Other known major sources of mercury
throughout the coastal area are air emissions and sewer outfalls, with some
other large local industrial sites such as chlor-alkali
plants. Accumulation of atmospheric oxidants and mercury can cause
high levels of mercury deposition in coastal areas when activated by sunlight,
which can result in very high levels of mercury in fish and
wild life
(68).
The U.S. FDA recommends that pregnant women
entirely avoid eating shark, swordfish, king mackerel and tilefish (59b),
because a significant portion of these types of fish have mercury levels above
the FDA action level of 1 ppm. However other
studies(
66,67)
including one by the National Academy of Sciences(63) have found the old FDA
action level of 1 ppm is obsolete and not adequate to protect the
public, as adverse effects have been found for those eating fish at least once
per week at average mercury levels below the FDA warning level
of � ppm(66).
Based on this a coalition of organizations using
the name Environmental Working
Group(
EWG) did a
large study to more fully assess mercury exposure effects and safety
limits(51). In addition to the FDA limits, EWG advises pregnant women, nursing
mothers and all women of childbearing age, should not eat tuna steaks, sea
bass, oysters from the Gulf Coast, marlin, halibut, pike, walleye, white
croaker, and largemouth
bass(
51). And that these
women should eat no more than one meal per month combined of canned tuna,
mahi-mahi, blue mussel, Eastern oyster, cod, pollock, salmon from the
Great Lakes, blue crab from the Gulf of Mexico, wild channel catfish
and lake whitefish. The EWG analysis was based on 56,000 test results on
mercury in fish from 7 different government agencies, and toxicity studies by
U.S. CDC and National Academy of Sciences.
However
EWG recognizes that fish is an important
health food with nutrients and essential fatty acids hard to substitute from
other sources. The following fish are safer choices for avoiding mercury
exposure: farmed trout or catfish, shrimp, fish sticks, wild Pacific salmon,
croaker, haddock, some varieties of flounder, and blue crab from the
mid-Atlantic. (51)
*******
22.5. Dangerous levels of mercury (above 1.5 ppm) have
been found in over one third of the
sharkmeat
tested
throughout the state of Florida (17d). A survey conducted by the
Minnesota Dept. Of Agriculture of swordfish offered for sale in Minnesota
grocery stores found levels of methyl mercury that are higher than the Federal
action guideline in over half of the samples (19.7b). A joint health advisory
warning of the danger of consuming
sharkmeat
was
issued by the Fla. Dept. of Agriculture and the Dept. of Health &
Rehabilitative Services (19.7). Florida commercial fishermen sold over 6.8
million pounds of
sharkmeat
in
1989, 36% of the U.S. total. Health warnings have also been
issued by the Fla. Dept. of H.R.S. for sea trout, bluefish, king & Spanish
mackerel, catfish, ladyfish, etc. (33,17a), and other ocean fish such as tuna
and swordfish have high levels. Florida Bay cormorants have also been found to
have high levels of mercury (14).
23. Mercury in Fresh Water Fish and
Wildlife
Studies have
found that freshwater predator fish such as bass, pickerel, and bowfin have
high levels of mercury in most of the state, with fish consumption warnings
issued (60,33,17a,17,17b). Eight other species (alligator gar, black crappie,
white crappie, blue catfish, flathead catfish, brook trout, drum, striped bass)
have average test levels near the FDA warning level or some tested above the
FDA action level (60). Over 2 million acres of
Florida�s
surface waters have fish with high levels of
mercury, averaging above the FDA/EPA warning level of 0.5 parts per million
(33) and even more above the U.S. EPA mercury health criterion of 0.3
ppm(
1.6). The major source of mercury into these
water bodies is air deposition that is brought down in rain. A
Florida emissions inventory found that the major sources of atmospheric mercury
were municipal solid waste combustors (MSW), electric utility industry, and
medical waste incinerators (33), but incinerator emissions have been
reduced in recent years. The most vulnerable groups to mercury
exposure are women who are pregnant or might become pregnant, nursing mothers,
and young children (65,59b,51,7.5,5). These groups should limit
consumption of freshwater fish to no more than one meal per week (6 ounces of
cooked fish for adults and 2 ounces of cooked fish for young
children). Other animal species that eat fish and crawfish, such as
cormorants, wading birds, raccoons, alligators,
mink,etc
.
and panthers
which eat raccoons have also been found to have dangerous levels of mercury and
are have been adversely affected(1.5,17.4). Three panthers along with many
birds that eat fish have died from mercury poisoning and others have very high
levels of mercury (14,17.4). The majority of Florida panthers in south
Florida have high levels of mercury and have had reproductive systems and
hormone levels disrupted to the extent of not being able to
reproduce. The majority of male panthers were found to have estrogen
levels higher than testosterone levels due to estrogenic effects of the mercury
and perhaps other estrogenic chemicals in the fish
(14).
23.5: Studies by the Wisconsin Dept. of Natural
Resources and Univ. of Wisconsin researchers (18.6,16.3,2.1) found hundreds of
lakes and streams in Wisconsin with mercury in fish at above the recommended
levels for
eating, and
concluded the major
source of the mercury appears to be air emissions. They
also found that one gram of mercury deposition is enough to cause the need for
a fish consumption limitation in a 25 acre lake, and that mercury
concentrations of 2 parts per trillion(parts per trillion(ppt) in lake water
often result in concentrations in fish sufficient to require consumption
advisories(Watras,18.6 &16.3,18) Warnings on eating fish have been issued
for thousands of rivers and lakes throughout the U.S. and Canada(64), for
approx. 20 % of all U.S. lakes including all Great Lakes.
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) has also
found widespread dangerous levels of
mercury(
as
much as 4.5 micrograms per gram of fish) in 94% of the hundreds of lakes and
streams tested in Minnesota (18.8, 16.3). MPCA
studies estimated that virtually all of the mercury in Minnesota lakes come
from emissions, with the largest amount from incinerators and coal plants
(18,18.8). They concluded that mercury emissions are a larger threat
to the
states
water resources than acid
rain, though acidity level is also a factor in the level of mercury
and other toxic metals in fish (18.8).
Mercury
deposition levels on the surface of lakes in Minnesota were 12 to 14 micrograms
per square meter per year. Precipitation measurements in Minnesota
were found to have an average mercury concentration of
19 ppt. Levels in sediment in recent years are more than 3.5
times levels in sediment prior to 1900, and approx. 25% of the mercury
deposited in a lake catchment area is exported to the lake
(18.8). Mercury in the
area�s
atmosphere
has increased an average of 2% per year, compared to a 1.5% increase over the
N. Atlantic Ocean which also was found to be primarily due to manmade
emissions. Deposition levels were found to be increasing throughout
the area due to long range transport,
butwas
highest
near emission sources. Worldwide mercury atmospheric levels are now at least 3
times the level of 1900, and there is much more mercury in aquatic ecosystems
than in past times (20), as shown by analyses of polar ice cores, lake
sediment cores, and peat cores.
Because of the
widespread high levels of toxic metals in fish and the food chain in Minnesota
and neighboring Great Lakes states, Minnesota requires emissions limits on lead
and mercury for municipal incinerators. The emission limit for
mercury was .002 pounds per ton for a 1990 incinerator permitted
(18.3). The most recent study recommended emission limits should be
no more than 50 pounds per year, whereas current EPA limits are
20,000 pounds (18.8).
24. According to EPA spokesmen, Gary Glass and
Ray Morrison, mercury has been found to be entering the food chain throughout
the U.S. At least 40 states and 2 Canadian provinces have limited or
banned consumption of fish from thousands of affected lakes and rivers in both
the U.S. and Canada (16.3,33). Mercury has been found to
be adversely affecting loons, eagles, ospreys, otters, and mink in the Great
Lakes area (28).
Studies by the Electric Power
Research Institute, the research arm of the electric utility industry, have
confirmed that atmospheric deposition of mercury accounts for most of the
mercury accumulating in fish in seepage lakes and that increased acidity
enhances mercury accumulations in fish (18). Approx. 90 %
of the mercury in fish is methyl mercury, the most toxic form to humans. Based
on their research, EPRI believes that most older estimates of mercury
levels are inaccurate and questionable, and that clean sampling/clean lab
procedures are required for accurate sampling of mercury. Reported
mercury removal levels by wet scrubbers have a very wide range, from 25% to
90%, but all of the reported data should be considered questionable (18).
Municipal
waste and coal contain large amounts of toxic metals such as mercury, lead,
cadmium, etc.; large volumes of toxic metal emissions are occurring where
stringent controls on incinerator fuel sources and stack emissions are not in
effect (18.3) as they are in some European countries.
26. The toxic metals most dangerous to people
eating
fresh water
fish are those that accumulate in
the edible muscle of fish‑ including mercury, arsenic, radioactive cesium, and
to a lesser degree lead (19.9). Most toxic metals such as
lead, cadmium, aluminum, etc. accumulate primarily in internal organs, fat,
fins, and mucus under the skin (21).
II(b). Bioaccumulation of Toxic
Metals in Marine Fish and S
hellfish
27. Shellfish, especially oysters, accumulate lead, mercury,
cadmium, copper, silver, arsenic, and radioactive metal isotopes
(19.9,3.3). Oysters and other shellfish are accumulating increasing
amounts of toxic metals, with oysters often accumulating levels of cadmium,
lead, and arsenic dangerous to people and above the FDA recommended action
level or guideline level (59). The following table gives a summary
of some of the levels of toxic metals found in shellfish in Florida.
The data for the Indian River Lagoon is for an
area with lower levels of metals in sediments than some other urban coastal
areas in Florida. The FDA Action Level is the level at which
commercial seafood may be removed from sale; however, it is based primarily on
acute toxicity criterion and does not take into account that some of the metals
such as mercury, lead, and cadmium have been found to be endocrine system disrupters
at relatively low levels and several of the metals are
carcinogenic, neurotoxic, and
immunotoxic
. While
there is no FDA Action Level for arsenic, arsenic is more acutely toxic than
the other metals for which there is an action level and arsenic is highly
carcinogenic (11.7,1.1). The drinking water guideline for arsenic is lower than
those for mercury or cadmium. The EPA toxics contaminant criteria
for arsenic in seafood is 2 ppm (36c).
Range
of Toxic Metals Observed in Florida Shellfish (ppm-wet weight*)
Metal
Oysters
Clams
FDEP
1984 N.O.A.A 1983-
1992 FDEP
1984 I.R.L.
1992 FDA EPA source:
(3.9) source: (3.7) source:(3.9) source:(3.7) Action Crit.
min/mean/max min
to max min/mean/max min to
max
Level
Level
Arsenic .
05/ 1.5/
7.8 1.0/
4.6/9.5 ** 2 Cadmium .10/
.48/ 1.6 .70 to 5.1 .05/
.35/1.1 .01 to 0.15 1.0 0.5
Chromium .005/.15/ .64 .20 to
0.9 .06/.30/1.28 .03 to
0.08 11 1
Copper .50/
7.3/28.4 .50/1.5/4.7 1.0
to 4.0 15
Lead .005/.14/1.36 .10
to 1.6 .05/.67/6.5 .04 to
1.73 1.2 0.5
Mercury .
001/.017/.05 .10 to
.16 .001/.02/.04 .001 to
.018 1.0 1
Nickel .005/
.23/1.1 .06/.72/2.6
Selenium .10/ .36/
.67 .18/.45/1.0 1
Zinc 34/ 205/
546 1
/ 12/ 25 1.7 to
53 60
* Indian River Lagoon data was calculated dry
weight basis. Since all other data shown here is wet weight, the
data for I.R.L. was converted to wet weight by assuming water content of clams
was 85%.
From the table it
is seen that the FDA Action level for cadmium and lead appear to be often
exceeded by oysters and clams from some polluted coastal areas of Florida, and
the EPA contaminant criteria for arsenic in seafood. This could
indicate that people eating seafood regularly from such a polluted area could
experience serious health problems over time. To date there has apparently been
no health warnings for shellfish comparable to the warnings for mercury in
freshwater fish, even though FDA Action levels may be exceeded by similar
levels. In a controlled study, oysters exposed to 10
micrograms per liter of cadmium in water accumulated
18 ppm of cadmium (3.9). None of the cadmium levels in the
limited surveys done in Florida have reached this level, but some areas of the
state have higher levels of cadmium in sediments than the sampled
areas. The Indian River Lagoon study (3.3) noted that areas
with the highest levels of metals in sediments were toxic to clams so no clams
in these locations could be sampled and all clam samples came from less
polluted sites. Mussels and crabs have been found to accumulate
cadmium inversely with the salinity or alkalinity of water (19.9).
The Canadian Food
and Drug Admin. has established 2 ppm as the maximum safe
concentration of lead in fish. Due to recent studies of lead and
learning disabilities, some researchers believe this level is too high and a
lower guideline is recommended by the FDA of 1ppm. As seen
from the sample data oysters often accumulate levels higher than this. Levels
of 2 micrograms per liter in water often mean levels in oysters of more than
2 ppm (19.9). Some U.S. rivers have above 20 micrograms
per liter of lead in some areas. Increased acidity
increases the availability of lead, and fish at PH 6.0 accumulate 3 times as
much lead as at PH 7.5 for the same concentration of lead in water.
Arsenic
accumulates in shellfish and has been found at levels 20 times the EPA
guideline maximum contaminant level (19.9). The
toxic
arsenite
form is the primary form in
shellfish and the most toxic form to
people. Radioactive cesium is dangerous to
people and is discharged from nuclear power
plants. Large amounts of radioactive isotopes are
discharged into Florida water bodies by coal plants and phosphate
mining, and
have been found in
shellfish. Toxic metals have been found in Florida shellfish in
several areas of the state (16.3e,3.3).
Crabs and fish
often accumulate high levels of copper which has an adverse effect on fish
survival, but
doesn't usually affect people because the
accumulation is not primarily in muscle tissue. Oysters and
squid accumulate copper to dangerous
levels however;
copper use as an algicide and water weed killer is a common source and has
been found to cause elevated copper levels in water and sediments in some areas
of the state such as the Crystal River.
Atmospheric metal
emissions to oceans are significantly altering the marine cycle of the
toxic metals (2,2.1). Oceans near areas with high fossil fuel
combustion have much higher levels of mercury and other toxic metals, with
atmospheric emissions being the main source of mercury in coastal
waters. Mercury gets into ocean fish and shellfish similarly to
freshwater fish.
A high percentage of coastal bay and estuarine
sediments tested in Florida have been found to have significantly elevated
levels of toxic metals (36), and sediments in Gulf Coast areas were found
to be toxic to marine organisms in 9 percent of the estuarine area (36b).
III. Effect of Toxic Metals on Forests and Plant
Ecosystems
28. Some metals are toxic to nitrogen-fixing
bacteria associated with root-systems of legumes (28). Nitrogen
and phosphorus cycling in soils can also be adversely affected by some
metals. In addition, litter decomposers can be destroyed by some
metals. All of these effects are made worse by acidity.
29. Heavy metals from atmospheric emissions are deposited
on leaves and soils of forests and cropland. Crop plants have been
shown to directly absorb and retain mercury and other toxic metals through
leaf uptake (58,2). The interaction of the heavy metals
and acid deposition is a factor in the extensive forest decline occurring
throughout Europe and North America (20, 20.2). Increased
levels of toxic metal emissions are leading to rapid buildups of trace metals
in soil and water and likewise to buildups in plants and the food chain, especially
in industrial areas and near large emission sources (2). Levels in
the U.S. and Europe with large emission sources are currently doubling every 3
to 10 years. The level in plants and crops has reached levels that
damage plants and cause human health damage in some areas (2) and is
approaching such levels in many other areas. The loading of the air
and environment in urban industrial areas with toxic metals is a major health
concern for the next and future generations, but the extent of metals emissions
is so large and widespread that even the air of the most remote areas of the
arctic and antarctica have significant levels (2).
The
solubility of aluminum in soils and other heavy metals (lead, cadmium, zinc,
etc.) being deposited on leaves and soils by air pollution increases with
increasing acidity. Canada has issued a health warning for Central
Canada against eating the livers or kidneys of game animals because of cadmium
buildup in the food chain (2). The main sources of such toxic
metal emissions are atmospheric emissions.
Mercury and other toxic metals have
also been found to be accumulating in the forest floor of European forests; the
humus of Swedish forest floors
are
estimated
to contain over 600 tons of mercury. Both inorganic and methyl
mercury are toxic to spruce seedlings, suppressing chlorophyll content and
interfering with uptake of nutrients. In many areas of Europe,
the mercury level is beyond the 0.5 ppm found to be toxic to forests
and is approaching this level in many other areas. The
accumulating mercury in forest floors was also found to be affecting watersheds
and to be cycling through the entire ecosystem (18d), adding to the
thousands of lakes with dangerous levels of mercury in the fish in Scandinavia. Ozone
pollution and reactive compounds containing chlorine or bromine
oxidise
elemental mercury to inorganic mercury which
is more readily deposited by
rain(
16.3). Mercury
deposited in the soil has been found by
Gov
�
t
studies to
be methylated to methylmercury by soil bacteria, with
uptatke
by plants
and outgassing of methylmercury and elemental mercury when
the sun shines (14.9).
At 2 remote stands of Norway spruce showing
serious decline, lead contamination/uptake was significantly increased on the
exposed windward edge, and there was a negative correlation between lead levels
and shoot growth (20b). This indicates dry deposition is
a major factor in lead uptake by forests. However, cadmium did not have a
similar pattern and apparently cadmium deposition is primarily through rain.
Toxic clouds/fog having relatively high levels of toxic metals and very low PH
have been found to be a major factor in forest damage in mountainous areas of
the eastern U.S. and Europe (20).
Uptake of mercury
by red mangrove and natural decomposition of leaves appears to play a role in
bioaccumulation of mercury in the Everglades ecosystem. Particulate
plant detritus is a primary energy source for many aquatic animals, and 80% of
detritus in the main area of the Everglades is from red mangrove
(58). Particulate organic detritus enriched by mercury is subjecting
animals in their food web to higher levels of mercury. There
is a 10 to 4 enrichment in suspended detritus compared
to undecomposed leaves, and a 6 to 4 enrichment for river bottom
detritus and peat (58). Peat is known to accumulate mercury
from emissions, etc. Disturbance of peat soils by burning,
agriculture, drying, etc. is likely to release mercury into the
environment. This is likely to be a factor in high levels of
mercury in the Everglades (17.4).
IV. Sources of Mercury Emissions and Mercury
Content of Fuels
30. There is consensus among
researchers that airborne emissions are the major source of mercury in
most lakes (2,2.1,16.2‑17,17.1,18‑18.8,22‑23.4,28,28.7,33,34,35) and that
incineration and coal combustion are the largest sources in most
areas. Researchers in Minnesota found a three to four‑fold increase in mercury
deposition in northern Minnesota since the mid 1800s (18.8). A Dept.
of Environmental Regulation Spokesman and emission studies indicate that based
on past tests, Florida municipal incinerators emit over 8 tons per year to the
environment and medical waste incinerators over 4 tons per year
(17.1,17,35). Florida coal power plants appear to have
emissions of about 3 tons per year, with at least that amount in coal ash that
can have air, soil, or water impacts(17b). About this
much mercury emissions also
comes
from a
combination of coal plants from other states or oil burning power
plants. A study by
Dr.John
Simmons(17d) estimated that several tons
per year of mercury emissions in South Florida comes from burning
sugarcane bagasse and related soil erosion, but this is largely
recycling of previously deposited mercury. C.S.
Volland
(18d) points out that Florida's high
temperatures and acidic soils high in chloride content make Florida's aquatic
ecosystem especially vulnerable to mercury.
31. Florida incinerators in 4 counties:
Pinellas, Hillsboro, Dade, and Palm Beach burned approx. 10,000 tons per day of
garbage in 1990. Sampling by the Dept. of Environmental
Regulation found that the Pinellas facility emitted 21 pounds of mercury
per day (19.7). Based on emissions tests at this and
other Florida facilities, the Florida facilities appear to be emitting approx.
9 tons of mercury per year (and considerable other toxic metals and other
toxics) (17.1,17,19.7,35). (see Appendix) The type of pollution
controls on some of these units have been found not to be effective for
mercury on most existing incinerators. More stringent controls have been
mandated for most incinerators.
32. Based on coal combustion data from the U.S.
Dept. of Energy and assuming coal averages 0.28 ppm mercury, U.S.
coal burned each year contains approx. 250 tons of mercury‑ the majority of
which appears to be emitted into the
air. Electricity generators and coal
combustion are projected to increase approx. 30% over the next 20 years, with
corresponding increases in other air toxics unless counter measures
are implemented (28). A study of coal plant emissions at a
Tennessee Valley Authority facility (21.6) found that over 92% of mercury
emissions were elemental mercury, that the mercury remained in the plume for
long distances, and precipitation scavenging was the main mechanism of mercury
deposition from such emissions. However, depending on the
percent of chlorine or similar reactive constituents of the coal burned, as
much as 50% of mercury in coal plant plumes can be water soluble inorganic
forms which are more easily removed by controls and also have shorter residence
times in the atmosphere. The majority of mercury in
plumes after emission controls appears to usually be elemental mercury. Much
higher levels of mercury deposition is found near point sources, though only a
small fraction of total mercury emissions are deposited
locally(
22).
Tests for
incinerators indicated that mercuric chloride was the main form of mercury
emitted, which appears to be a much more localized deposition source. U.S.
municipal incinerators produce approx. 187 tons of mercury emissions
per year (21). Hospital and hazardous
waste incinerators produce additional toxic metal emissions.
Approx. 800 tons
of mercury is mined in the U.S. each year (21.6). The following
table gives a breakout by the U.S. Bureau of Mines (18c) of the
approx. 1145 tons per year used in manufacturing in 1989:
Use tons percent
____________________________________________________________
soda/chlorine manuf. 328 28.7
batteries 208 18.2
latex paint 192 16.8
wiring/switches 160 14.0
instruments 68 5.9
other chemical
products 40 3.5
fluorescent lighting/ 36 3.1
mercury vapor
lights
dental supplies 36 3.1
other 76 6.6
33. Recent studies have raised considerable doubt about the
accuracy of past mercury level measurements from power plants, incinerators, or
natural sources (18,60). However, most studies reviewed
agreed manmade sources of mercury were much more significant on land areas than
natural sources (1.9,2,2.1,18.8,20.4, 21.5,22,57,28,28.7,34,60e4r
. They also agreed that atmospheric fluxes from
combustion of fossil fuels dwarf those from other
sources. The following table gives estimates of
emissions by natural sources, manmade sources, and biogenic recycling from the
articles reviewed:
Mercury emissions
source tons/year total
__________________________________ _________ _____
Natural sources
seasalt
spray 20
windblown dust 55
volcanic activity 75
rock weathering/soil outgassing* 500 650
* a significant portion of
soil outgassing is of mercury previously deposited
from manmade sources
Manmade sources
energy production 1200
waste incineration 750
wood combustion 270
other fossil
fuel
combustion 600
mine operations 100
mercury related
manufacturing 100
smelting/refining 130
consumer products 50 3200
The referenced articles also give estimates of
additional man‑made source impacts directly to soils or aquatic systems of over
8000 tons from coal, incinerator, or wood ashes, manufacturing or industrial
effluent, sewage, mining/smelting, metal fabrication, etc. According to FDEP
staff, the average concentration of mercury found in limestone bedrock range
from 33 parts per billion(ppb) to 48 parts per billion(ppb), and the effects
of weathering processes appear negligible in Florida (21). There is
general agreement among the summary articles reviewed on source of mercury that
the major sources are continental and manmade sources are the largest source in
local industrial areas‑ amounting to as much as 90% of emissions
(1.9,2,2.1,9.3,18.8,22,57,28,34).
Not included separately
in either of the above lists is a source that is becoming more important‑
biogenic recycling of toxic metals through the atmosphere and aquatic systems
through forest fires, muck farming, dredging, organic uptake and decomposition,
ocean/atmosphere interchange, watershed water cycling through soils and
humus,etc
.
Biogenic
and hydrological cycling of mercury appear to be on the order of 4000 tons per year
(22), including the air/sea exchange amounting to approx. 2000 tons per
year. The air/sea exchange appears to not have a major impact on
continental areas, however manmade emissions are a major source of deposition
to oceans (2,2.1). Much of the mercury (and other toxic
metals) being biogenically recycled or emitted came from past
atmospheric emissions. Present background fluxes of mercury
appear to be from 3 to 6 times those
of preindustrial levels; present fluxes are the sum of
manmade and background fluxes. However, as Sweden has already
found out, even if most atmospheric emissions were ended, this supply of
mercury already in the biogenic system would continue to have an impact on
water bodies and the food chain.
Additional evidence for the
primary importance of manmade emissions on land areas is found in the
literature. Measurements have found mercury levels in
open oceans to be much lower than in coastal areas impacted by manmade and
continental sources (2,2.1,60,22). Estuarine waters
average at least twice as high in mercury level as coastal water, and coastal
waters sampled (2 to 10 nanograms per liter) had levels at least
twice as high as open
oceans( 0.5
to
2 ng/l). Over 99% of mercury transfer at the ocean
boundary is vapor phase, with the majority being elemental
mercury. Although some high levels have been reported locally
in volcanically active ocean areas, studies reviewed (60, 22)
estimated the total contribution of submarine volcanism as very small compared
to input from rivers, coastal sources, and the atmosphere. The
highest levels in coastal waters were found in localized areas impacted by
sewer or industrial outfalls or rivers with such sources.
Rainwater in open ocean
areas was found to contain very small levels of
mercury(
<1 ng/l),
and approx. 10 % the average levels in coastal waters
(60,20b2,2.1). Mercury in levels over continental areas
average several times higher than over coastal waters and over 20 times higher
than over open ocean areas. Water soluble gaseous phases from
continental sources appear to make up a significant portion of mercury in
rainfall over oceans, especially in areas near continental areas with the
highest mercury in rainfall. Elemental mercury appears to be
oxidized by ozone or other oxidants and scavenged by rainfall slowly
(20.4). Levels of mercury in rainfall of the N.W. Atlantic Ocean, where
continental mercury sources are highest, are larger than over other oceans‑
consistent with the hypothesis that the largest sources of mercury are
continental (20.4). The highest levels of mercury in rainfall (over
60 ng/cubic meter) have been reported in areas with high levels of
atmospheric emissions (18.6‑18.8,20).
Studies in Minnesota,
Wisconsin, Canada, and Sweden offer additional support that manmade sources are
significant (18.3‑18.8, 21.6, 20, 18d, 21). These studies have found
levels of mercury increasing between 2% to 5% per year in
freshwater fish and sediments, with recent sediment layers
having much higher levels than sediments deposited before large manmade
emissions.
Over 80% of total
mercury in the atmosphere is volatile insoluble mercury vapor, primarily
elemental mercury which has an average residence time of several months and
travels long distances (20). This mercury vapor is relatively uniformly
distributed throughout the troposphere, with an average concentration of
2 nanograms per cubic meter in the northern hemisphere and 1 ng/m3 in
the southern
hemisphere; with
higher
levels near local sources or industrial areas‑ depending on distance and wind
direction from the source, emissions
levels,etc
. The
non elemental
vapor portion
(monomethyl and dimethyl mercury and mercury chloride) represent
more localized sources and has a much shorter average residence time. This
portion can be a considerably higher fraction of the total in regions with
local emission sources (20). At temperatures above 70 degrees,
a significant and increasing portion of elemental or dimethyl mercury
volatilizes from water (or soils), with the air to water equilibrium point
being over 30% and increasing with temperature.
34. Generally coal from northern Appalachia, the
Gulf Coast, and Washington have the highest levels of mercury, ranging
from 0.20 to 0.30 parts per million
(
28). Western
coal ranges from 0.05 to 0.13 ppm, while Midwestern coal ranges from 0.09
to 0.17 ppm. Data is available by state or in some cases by mine (28,
Table B-2).
V. MANMADE EMISSIONS OF OTHER TOXIC METALS
35. There was consensus among a panel of experts
convened by a group of State governors to assess the impact of air toxics that
fossil fuel combustion was the main source of atmospheric concentrations of
trace metals (28). Aquatic systems and the food chain were
found to be most impacted by atmospheric trace metals. The majority
of impact on humans was through the food chain, primarily from fish or shellfish,
but toxic metals are also building up in soils, plants, crops, and game
animals(
2). Average airborne concentrations of
most toxic metals in urban industrial areas are 5 to 100 times those of
remote/non-industrial areas. Acidity was a major factor in facilitating trace
metals in the food chain.
Utilities and incinerators are the
largest source of mercury, cadmium, arsenic, chromium, and manganese emissions
in the U.S. (28,1.2). Fossil fuel combustion is also responsible for
over 90% of nickel and beryllium emissions. Midwestern coal, especially
Missouri and Illinois, have very high levels of cadmium, nickel, and
lead. Gulf Coast coal is high in most trace metals. Coal
from northern Appalachia is high in arsenic, as well as
mercury. Tobacco smoke is also a major source of cadmium that is
accumulating in people (1.2).
36. Only mercury, arsenic, and selenium are
naturally in the vapor phase in the atmosphere, the rest being non‑volatile and
entering the atmosphere primarily from combustion or
smelting. In addition to large volumes of manmade emissions of
the toxic volatile metals, there is significant cycling of these metals
deposited from past emissions (1.9,2.0). The following table gives annual
atmospheric emissions due to human activity and average levels in precipitation:
Toxic
Metal Emissions
from Toxic Metal
in
Human
Activities Precipitation
(tons per
year)
(micrograms per
liter)
Urban(
local sources) Rural
____________________________________________________________
lead 2,000,000 34 8
cadmium 6,000 0.7 0.5
arsenic 86,000 5.8 0.3
chromium 103,000 3.2 0.9
nickel 108,000 12 2.4
copper 286,000 40 5.4
selenium 15,000
silver 5,500 3.2 0.5
tin 47,000
vanadium 231,000 40 9
zinc 924,000 34 30
Greatly increased levels of toxic
metals such as lead, copper, and zinc have been found in peat bogs, soils, and
sediments compared to preindustrial levels (2), and increasing levels
are being found in fish, oysters, shellfish, other organisms, and plants. This
applies to remote areas and remote lakes indicating atmospheric emissions as
the primary source. Levels of toxic metals in urban and rural areas
of the U.S. are higher than in remote areas of the world by a factor of over
10, with the highest levels in East Coast areas (2). As PH
decreases, the fraction of toxic metal compounds in water in more toxic forms
increases.
The level of arsenic, chromium, and radium
exceeded the health- based screening criteria of EPA in
phosphogypsum
waste from the majority of sites tested
in Central Florida. Concentrations of
arsenic,lead
,cadmium,chromium,fluoride,zinc
,
antimony,copper
, and thallium exceeded health screening
criteria in leachate from some facilities, with arsenic exceeding the
criteria at most facilities(13). Other toxic metals exceeded the criterion for
aquatic life.
VI. THE RELATION OF ACIDITY AND ACID RAIN TO TOXIC METAL IMPACTS
ON AQUATIC SYSTEMS, FISH,
THE FOOD CHAIN, AND HEALTH
37. Methyl mercury bioaccumulates in fish and food
chains; fish‑eating birds and fish‑eating mammals are being seriously
impacted in increasing numbers (16.3,17.4,17b,16.3,18.8). A consistent
feature of waters having a methylmercury problem is low PH (acidic)
or a steady flow of acid deposition (16.3,17b,18c,21). Mercury
concentrations in fish have been found to be inversely correlated
with lake PH, alkalinity, and calcium level.
Also
the
permeability of biological membranes to methyl mercury and to other divalent
metal ions is inversely correlated to water calcium concentration.
As PH decreases, the fraction of mercury
in more toxic forms increases (2).
At PH = 8, almost all of monomethyl mercury is in
hydroxyl form which is least
toxic;
whereas at PH = 6
or less, an increasing fraction is methyl mercury, the most dangerous
form.
Likewise
for inorganic mercury
at PH = 8, almost all mercury is in hydroxyl form; whereas at PH = 6 or
less, over 90% is mercury chloride‑ a more toxic form.
Microbial net production of methyl
mercury at the sediment/water interface and in the
water
column
is more rapid in low PH waters (18c,21). Decreased Ph also decreases loss of
volatile mercury from lakes and increases mercury binding to particles‑ factors
enhancing the bioavailability of mercury for methylation (18c). Decreased
PH also reduces dissolved organic carbon, which inhibits buildup of methyl
mercury in fish. High temperature has been found to
promote methylation in lake sediments which peaks in summer. The
increased input
of mercury into water bodies in the last century has been a
factor in the increased methyl mercury in fish, with levels of deposition 3 to
5 times the past century; however other factors previously mentioned cause
differences in net methylation of mercury and content of fish in individual
circumstances. In newly formed reservoirs, the decomposition of newly flooded
organic material stimulates methylation of mercury and appears to be
a predominant that is increasing
mercury in fish in such water bodies (18c).
Some suggested amelioration strategies
(18c) to reduce mercury in fish include: reduction
in mercury emissions, reduction in acidification of lakes and streams,
manipulation of conditions affecting demethylation, addition of selenium
to water
bodies, and
addition of
lime/calcium source to water bodies.
38. There is a
clearcut
health danger from acidification of water
supplies. The solubility of highly toxic metals such as lead,
cadmium, and aluminum
increases
sharply with
decreasing PH. Acid water leaches metals from soil, lake sediment, metal pipes,
and solder joints‑all with clear danger to human health. It
also releases asbestos fiber from cement‑asbestos pipes commonly used in public
water systems (22 &23.3).
The adverse health effects of
lead are so well known that the presence of increased lead in drinking water
being found is a clear indication of a health problem, according to John Wood
of the Gray Freshwater Biological Institute in Navarre, Minn.
(21) A major new concern is the growing presence of aluminum
in water due to acid rain. Aluminum is the third most common element
on
earth, but
is insoluble in neutral or
alkaline water. But aluminum becomes increasingly solubilized as PH
falls below 6.0, and the aluminum salts formed become much more
toxic(
21). Because of acid rain the increase of dissolved
aluminum in lakes is absolutely massive, according to researcher Pamela Stokes
of the Univ. of Ontario. Aluminum is toxic to
fish at only 100 parts per
billion(
parts per
billion(ppb) and much higher levels are being
observed. Adverse effects of aluminum on fish and birds
is
becoming common. A study on the influence
of PH on metal toxicity to fish found toxicity of aluminum increases with
decreases in PH, and the recent declines of east coast striped bass is related
to decreasing
PH(
25). In test, all fish died
within 7 days at PH 5.5 or lower at any concentration of aluminum
tested. At PH 6.5, exposure to 100 micrograms per
liter(
parts per billion(ppb) of aluminum resulted in 97%
mortality by day 7. At PH 7.2, exposure to 300 micrograms per liter of aluminum
resulted in all fish dead within 7 days.
Considerable evidence
exists supporting a relation between aluminum and humans having neurological
disorders such as dementia,
Alzheimersdisease
,
Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which are becoming more
common (22,21). Acidification also leads to a buildup of the more toxic form of
metalloids such as arsenic and selenium in water (21).
VII. European Experience with Mercury Emissions
39. Swedish and Danish studies found that
mercury deposition rates in densely settled areas of Scandinavia have increased
by a factor of 5 in this century, with most of the increase since
WWII;
whereas in remote areas deposition rates
increased by less than a factor of 2. They concluded
combustion emissions are the main source of the increased deposition rates
(21.6,20). Danish researchers have found that the principal source of mercury
in peat bogs is from air borne deposition. Natural input from rock
underneath is small due to limited capillary action of bogs (18d).
The mercury and other toxic metals
accumulating in Scandinavia's forest floors was found to be affecting
watersheds and to be cycling through the entire ecosystem (18d), adding to the
thousands of lakes with dangerous levels of mercury in the fish in
Scandinavia. In Sweden where mercury emissions have been severely
reduced, most of the input of mercury into freshwater lakes occurs by
the exchange of mercury from soils and forest floors, where
over 600 tons has been estimated to have accumulated, in regions where acid
precipitation is severe (21).
Because of documentation
of dangerous levels of mercury and cadmium in the food chain and humans in some
areas of Europe and
Europe�s
widespread use of
incinerators, several European countries have placed bans or limitations on use
of mercury and cadmium in products such as batteries and paint
(55)). They are also developing emissions caps for mercury and
other toxic metals. The Swedish emission limit for mercury is 40 micrograms per
cubic meter.
A study by the
Swedish Environmental Protection Board found that approx. 50% of mercury in the
Swedish environment was due to incinerator emissions
(55). Mercury emissions in Germany were found to be over 20
tons per year (24). Incineration and
wastewater
treatment
were
found to be the biggest sources of metals
pollution in Switzerland (12) along with crematoria (14.9). Heavy
metals are inevitably concentrated in current incineration plants to dangerous
levels. Studies in several European countries have found 35 to 60% of
incinerator emissions of mercury to be due to batteries
(55),21,24). Both Switzerland and Sweden have declared any battery
containing over .025% cadmium or mercury to be a hazardous waste and require
labeling. The European Commission is proposing
a European-wide limitation on the mercury content of batteries to go
into effect in 1992(55)). Emissions of mercury due to
batteries have been declining due to such limitations; however, emissions of
some other toxic metals have increased due to the changes.
VIII. Experience with Emissions Control
Equipment for Toxic Metals and Mercury Reduction Options
40. Most air pollution controls such as dry scrubbers
and electrostatic filters have not been found to be effective at removing toxic
metal emissions such as mercury (17, 17.1, 17,9,
28,39). A study by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
concluded that mercury was not effectively removed in most incinerators that
have been tested (18.3). Advanced coal cleaning techniques remove
approx. 21% of mercury and 55% of lead (39), and electrostatic precipitators
remove the majority of most toxic metals other than mercury and an average of
16% of mercury. Flue gas desulfurization has a mercury
removal range of 0 to 60% with a median of 17% (39).
Sampling at Minnesota and California incinerators with dry
scrubbers and filters has found most mercury is not removed (often less
than 30%). Carefully maintained and monitored wet scrubbers
operating at low stack temperatures have been found to be able to control
emissions of most toxic metals other than mercury. Wet scrubbers
have been found to remove 10% to 65% of mercury depending on the fuel and
other conditions (18,39). However, operation of scrubbers below
300 degrees faces other problems where acid gases form or in combustion
processes where calcium and chlorine are present. Calcium chloride and other
such compounds readily absorb water and will blind the filter
bags. Also, many of these scrubbers or spray dry absorber/fabric
filter systems have been found to experience degradation of performance in
periods after startup and compliance/performance testing due to caking of
solids on filter fabrics, plugging of ash removal systems, and carryover of
liquids from the absorber vessel (22). The mercury
removal rate for such SDA/FF systems on mass burn incinerators ranged from 30
to 85% (22).
Most dry or semidry air pollution control
systems were not found to be effective at controlling mercury, arsenic, or
selenium‑ without other more specific control mechanisms (18.3). One
study found a dry scrubber plus a baghouse was able to remove 75 to
85% of mercury emissions, while dry scrubbers with electrostatic precipitators
removed only 35 to 45% of mercury (24). However, some researchers at state
and federal environmental regulation agencies as well as university researchers
and environmental group researchers indicate that no pollution control
technology has been found that effectively controls emissions from some toxic
metals such as mercury (21, 17, 21.6, 21). They also indicate
that toxic ash and dust are a serious health threat to those handling or
working with it, as well as a danger to groundwater and drinking
water. Hundreds of other toxic chemicals including highly dangerous dioxins,
furans, and chlorine/bromine compounds‑ as well as acid pollutants and
greenhouse gases have been found to be emitted by incinerators (21,29).
41. The amount of chlorine in fuel affects which forms of mercury
are generated and the success of removal by pollution controls. Higher
chlorine levels produce more mercuric chloride‑ which is highly volatile but
easier to control than elemental mercury (23.2). Mercury in the
flue gas of a coal fired power plant was found to be almost totally elemental
mercury due to lower chlorine levels in the fuel
(22,16.3). However higher chlorine levels in incinerators
which produce mercuric chlorides also produce more volatile arsenic and
chromium compounds which are more likely to escape dry scrubbers or similar
controls.
42. A group of toxic air emission experts
assembled at a workshop by State governors indicated that energy conservation
measures are the most cost- effective method of controlling trace metals such
as mercury and cadmium (28). Fuel switching to coal low in
mercury or cadmium was also very cost effective in specific cases, since coal
from certain areas has much higher levels of mercury and cadmium than from
other regions. Western coal in general has less mercury than
eastern coal (34). Northern Appalachia coal and lignite from
the Gulf Coast and North Dakota have the highest levels of
mercury. Midwest and Gulf Coast coal has the highest levels of
cadmium, with extremely high levels in Missouri and Illinois.
Mercury emission
levels can be reduced 35 to 50% by switching from high mercury coal to lower
mercury coal (28, Table 3-1). Physical coal cleaning can reduce
mercury emissions approx. 30%, higher for some coals (28, Table 3-5).
Existing control
technologies mercury removal efficiencies range from almost none for hot-side
electrostatic precipitators (ESP) to 35 to 40 % for cold-side ESPs,
wet scrubbers, and
baghouses(
28).
Among new
technologies, activated carbon used with scrubbers and ESP
or baghouses appear to remove 80 to 90% of mercury (28). Sodium
hypochlorite with scrubber, lignite coke NOx Technology, and
Sulfur-Impregnated Alumina and Carbon appear to have potential to remove over
95% of mercury from emissions. However, mercury also tends to
volatilize from waste piles so net mercury removal is more questionable.
Minnesota PCA estimates cost of effective mercury control for coal plants or
incinerators at $2500 to $5000 per pound. A policy study by MPCA
recommended emission limits should be no more than 50 pounds per year, much
lower than current EPA standards.
Physical coal
cleaning removes 25 to 69% of cadmium depending on chemical composition, and
from 10 to 75% of other trace metals (28, Table
4-3). Baghouses are highly effective at removing cadmium and
most trace metals that are not primarily in elemental vapor form such as
mercury, arsenic, and selenium. ESPs are more effective for
large particle sizes.
IX. TOXIC METALS IN FLUE ASH AND BOTTOM ASH
43. Large volumes of most toxic metals are
present in both emissions and ash from municipal or hospital incinerators or
from coal power plants. Extensive information on content of waste
ash and on emissions is available from EPA, FDEP, the California Air Resources
Board, Environmental Defense Fund, Univ. of Florida researchers, etc.(17,21,30,30b,30c). A
listing of average metal content of coal and coal ash from a TVA plant is given
in Appendix 3. Coal plants produce approx. 90 million tons per year of ash and
35 million tons of flue gas
desulfurizationwastes
(
30). Coal plants with scrubbers produce for each
megawatt of power about 308 tons of fly ash, 77 tons of bottom ash, and 364
tons of
fluegas
desulfurization waste
for landfilling. Most coal ash laboratory tests have found
cadmium and arsenic at levels considered hazardous per EPA RCRA standards,
along with lower levels of other toxic metals (30). Toxic
constituents from coal combustion waste disposal sites have been detected in
both on-site and off-site ground and surface water. Where the depth
to groundwater is less than 30 feet, "there is a reasonably high potential
that leachate will reach groundwater unless extensive precautions are
taken" (30). The high PH that often characterizes Western coals
tends to cause the release of harmful toxic metals such as arsenic, selenium, and
manganese.
According to an
article in the Wall Street Journal (20), most municipal incinerators
reduce volume approx. 60
% ,
leaving 40% to
be landfilled. This article also found most to be expensive to
build and operate and to result in high garbage bills or expensive
energy. From California experience the bottom ash and fly ash
contain heavy metals and other pollutants such as dioxins at levels that make
it hazardous waste and subject to disposal costs at least twice that of normal
garbage. Other new technologies such as composting appear to
be safer environmentally than incineration and also much lower in cost
(20).
44. Minnesota studies have found from 1% to 10%
of ash at mass burn facilities to be flue ash, while 30 to 40% of refuse
derived fuel (RDF) ash was fly ash (18.3). Minnesota tests have
found high levels of cadmium and other toxic metals in most mass burn
incinerator fly ash (see Table). RDF plant fly ash tended
to have lower levels of mercury due to pre‑sorting of
garbage. However, RDF plants were found to tend to have higher
emissions of dioxins and furans.
Toxic
Metals in Flue Ash of Incinerators (18.3)
Heavy
Metals
Metals
in
Waste Metals in Flue Ash
(grams per ton) � ����
�(
parts per million)*
_____________________________________________________________
Lead 1500 30,000
Cadmium 20 2,000
Mercury 5 3,000
Copper 1000 3,000
Nickel 100 100
Zinc 3200 80,000
* multiply by 0.91
to convert to grams per ton
For incinerators
with scrubbers, the distribution of cadmium was 30% in the bottom ash, 62 to 65
% in flue ash, and 5 to 8% as emissions (24). Toxic metals have
been found to be increasingly soluble in acidic
conditions. Cadmium was found to be 85%
soluble at a PH of 4.0. Flue ash tends to be alkaline which
reduces solubility of toxic metals such as cadmium, mercury, lead,
etc. However, high PH causes the release of harmful toxic
metals such as arsenic, selenium, and manganese, and exposure to acidic water
or rainfall over time can reduce the PH.
Nationally, tests
have found incinerator fly ash cadmium to exceed
the EPA EP toxicity standard 97% of the time (18.3 & 21).
Combined bottom and fly ash exceeded the cadmium toxicity standard 14% of the
time. For bottom ash only cadmium exceeded
limits 2% of the time. RDF plant fly ash in Minnesota tended to have lower
levels of mercury due to pre‑sorting. Because of their adverse experience
with toxic metals, Minnesota requires all municipal solid waste incinerators to
test ash quarterly for leachable metals via EPA Method 1312‑Synthetic
Precipitation Leach Test for Soils. Minnesota also requires ash to be
disposed of in permitted
monofills
with
liners and leachate collection systems (18.3).
45. A significant fraction of oxidized mercury
added to a soil sample is quickly reduced and volatilized
(22,20). The evaporation of mercury captured in soils or fly
ash escalates dramatically(exponentially) as surface temperature increases
above 70 degrees F (57,20). One study reported that over a
period of 14 days, from 10 to 15% of the mercury in fly ash from a fabric
filter evaporated at room temperature (22). Emission
levels of waste ash piles from
chloralkali
plants have been found to be 25% as much
as active plant emissions. At a temperature of 86 degrees, an
old
chloralkali
waste pile was found to
produce emissions in the vicinity approaching EPA ambient air
quality guidelines (57,20). This is a special
problem in Florida where dark fly ash often attains a temperature of 140
degrees.
X. Heavy Metals and Drinking Water
46. Researchers have found the levels of toxic metals in water due
to acidic pollutants are having serious and permanent adverse
health effects (2.8). Over 38 million Americans now drink water
containing over 20 parts per
billion(
parts per
billion(ppb) lead(25.5). An EPA study estimates
that reducing lead content of water in homes to 20 parts per billion(ppb) would
bring an economic benefit over $1 billion and a net savings of over $800
million, as well as large scale reductions in health problems and learning
disabilities. Recent studies have concluded drinking water is
now the number one source of lead in the human blood stream (2.8 & 2). The
largest source of lead and heavy metals in drinking water is from the
dissolving of lead or other heavy metals like cadmium and copper from home
drinking water pipes or lead solder. The more
acidic and softer drinking water is, the
more heavy
metals
are absorbed. Heavy metals in some surface water used as drinking water
are also increasing (25 & 2).
According to EPA,
lead in drinking water is a special problem in Florida due to the high acidity
of much Florida drinking water, which causes more rapid absorption of lead and
other heavy metals from pipes or
soil(
2.5). An
EPA survey of drinking water in 1986 (2.5,2.8) found that average lead levels
in drinking water in many areas of Florida were above the EPA
drinking water standard of 20 parts per billion(ppb)(mcg/dl); and that
thousands of Florida children have been drinking water with lead levels above
the level that studies by the U.S. Center for Disease Control and EPA
indicate are
enough to permanently adversely
affect learning ability.
Thus
EPA
ordered all school districts in Florida to test their water for lead, and
issued a health warning regarding lead in drinking water in
Florida. Several Florida counties including Leon
and Broward found water from over 20% of the school drinking fountains to
contain levels of lead that have been shown to cause serious decreases in
learning ability.
Over 50 % of home
drinking water tested in some areas of Florida also had dangerous levels of
lead. As seen from other studies, even levels of lead
considerably lower than the EPA standard and the average level of lead in
Florida drinking water have been shown to have serious health effects.
47. The Center for Disease
Control(
CDC) standard for" excessive absorption"
of lead by children is 25 mcg/dl.
However
the
EPA Clean Air Science Advisory Committee has recommended a reduction to 10
mcg/dl. Over 60% of U.S. children under 5 years of age exceed
this level, according to an EPA survey, and over 40% of adults
(9). As a beginning to reach the goal for blood lead level,
EPA has reduced the EPA drinking water standard to 15 parts
per billion(ppb) from 50 parts per billion(ppb
)(
2.3). The
drinking water of approx. 40 million Americans exceeds 20 parts
per billion(ppb) lead (9).
48. The following table prepared under an EPA
contract and presented at a
New York workshop on acid
deposition(
18.6) obtained results very similar to
another study by Richards and
Moore(
18.6.3). It gives the estimated relation
between lead concentrations in drinking water and human blood levels:
Lead in Tap
Water Lead in Blood
Due to Water
(parts per
billion(
ppb)
(mcg/dl)
‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑ ‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑‑
1 3.4
5 5.8
10 7.4
20 9.1
25 10.0
50 12.6
100 15.8
Although lead in
drinking water appears to currently be the number one cause of lead in human
blood, it is responsible for less than 50 % of lead in
humans. Thus lowering the EPA drinking water standard to 15
parts per billion(ppb) does not appear sufficient to reduce the level of lead
in people's blood who are drinking water at the EPA standard to the blood lead
level recommended by the EPA Clean Air Scientific Advisory
Committee(
10 mcg/dl). In fact
lowering the standard to 10 parts per billion(ppb) may not be sufficient
to lower blood lead level to the recommended
level(
26.5).
Similar
conclusions had also been reached
earlier(
Moore
et al in a 1980 EPA study & 26.5). Several
researchers have concluded that lowering standard near 5 parts per billion(ppb)
is necessary to ensure protection from significant adverse health
effects, and
have offered analyses supporting the cost
effectiveness of such a lowering of the standard (8). A study by
Erik Jansson estimated that a program resulting in an average blood
lead reduction of 2 mcg/dl would save approx. $6 billion in medical cost and
reduce U.S. cancer deaths from approx. 22% of the population to about 20 % of
the population (all else being equal). Additional reductions would bring
roughly proportional savings (2.8).
XI. Toxic Metals from Sewer Plants and Urban
Runoff
49.
Sewage treatment plants
and septic tanks are a major source of toxic metal discharges
into rivers, estuaries, and bays in the U.S. Mercury, lead,
copper, chromium, etc. have been found in sediments and the food chain in many
areas near sewer outfalls (27). Municipal sewer sludge in Rochester,
N.Y. averages 1.24 ppm mercury, with 6% being methyl mercury
(27).
Dental amalgam
has been found to be the largest source of
mercury in most sewers and sewer sludge, with
the 2 largest sources being dental office effluent and excretion
into sewers by those with dental amalgam fillings (14.9). Sewers are a major
source of mercury in water bodies, fish, and wildlife, with over 30% of U.S.
lakes having fish consumption warnings and similar for rivers and
bays. The average amalgam filling has
�
gram of mercury which is enough to contaminate all fish in a
10- acre lake to dangerous levels(35a). All sewer sludge has high levels
of mercury due to dental amalgam which results in mercury in crops
and methylation of mercury by soil bacteria, with subsequent
outgasing
of high levels of mercury (14.9).
Use of sewer sludge on gardens and farms
was found to lead to buildup of mercury in the soil and uptake by
plants. Industrial and commercial discharges have been found to be poorly
monitored and enforced by most public sewer systems. Four types of
toxic metals and two banned pesticides were found in plant samples and
sediments taken from St. Joseph's Bay where large areas of sea grasses
are dying (57). Toxic metals have also been found
in sediments and the food chain in other coastal bays and lakes throughout
Florida, with an additional source of such toxics in sediments being urban runoff
(27.5).
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*************
Major
Atmospheric Mercury Sources (partial list)
Estimated
Estimated
Source
Fuel Controls
Fuel Emissions
Emissions
Burned Rate
(4) pounds
1993
________________________________(Tons)______________________
Incinerators:
Pinellas
Co. MSW ESP 860,900 .0074
lb
/
T(
1) 6371
Hillsborough
Co MSW
ESP 421,500 .0056
lb
/T(1) 2360
McKay
Bay MSW ESP 295,312 .0070
lb
/
T(
1) 2067
Pasco
County MSW DS/FF 322,794 .0026
lb
/
T(
1) 839
Lee
County MSW DS/FF 305,000 .0021
lb
/
T(
1) 640
Lake
County MSW DS/FF 164,000 .0025
lb
/
T(
1) 410
Key West
Incin
. MSW ESP 43,800 1.5 ppm 131
Dade Co.
Incin
. RDF ESP 972,000 .0024
lb
/
T(
1) 2333
South Broward Co
MSW DS/FF 1,554,000
* .
0017
lb
/T(1) 2007
North Broward Co
MSW DS/FF " .0021
lb
/
T(
1) 946
Palm Beach
Co. RDF DS/ESP
730,000 .00036lb/
T(
1) 263
Bay Co
Incin
. MSW ESP 159,120 .0024
lb
/
T(
1) 382
Total 18,749
Tampa Elec. Plants
Big Bend 1,2,
3 Coal
ESP 3,900,000 .1575 ppm(2) 1228
Big Bend
4 Coal WS 1,400.000 .063
ppm(
3) 176
Gannon Coal
ESP 3,100,000
.1575 ppm(2) 976
Gannon
1 Oil
?
1.4 million
brl
21.4lb/
mbrl
30 Total
2410
Florida Power Plants
Crystal
River Coal
ESP 7,000,000
.1575 ppm(2) 2200
Oil
?
9.7 million
brl
21.4lb/
mbrl
200 Total
2400
Gulf Power Plants
Crist Coal
ESP 3,350,000
.1575 ppm(2)
1055
Smith Coal
ESP 1,200,000
.1575 ppm(2) 378
Scholz Coal ESP 150,000 .1575
ppm(
2) 47 Total
1480
JEA Power
Plants Coal
WS 3,700,000 .063 ppm(3) 466
Oil
?
8 million
brls
21.4lb/
mbrl
200 Total
666
Gainesville Plant
Coal ESP 670,000 .1575
ppm(
2) 211 Total
211
FPL Power
Plants Oil
?
34.1 million
brls
21.4lb/
mbrl
720 Total
720
State
Total 7887
MSW= municipal solid waste (not all of those in
state are listed here)
ESP= electrostatic
precipitator, FF
=
Fabric Filter
WS= wet scrubber plus electrostatic
precipitator
DS= dry scrubber
(1) emission rate from KBN
Engineering, Inc.- emissions tests, 1992
(2) based on average mercury in
Eastern
coal(
KBN) with 25% removal
(3) based on average mercury in
Eastern
coal(
KBN) with 70% removal
(4) MSW contains over 2000 tons of toxic metals
including lead, mercury, cadmium, chromium, nickel, aluminum, etc.
per 1 million tons of MSW. Waste burned in the over 300 medical
waste incinerators in Fla. which are also major sources
is similar. Coal
contains over 1000 tons of toxic metals per 1 million tons
Appendix
1 �
Average
Toxic Metal Concentrations in Various Fuels
(parts per
million)
Metal #6 Oil Eastern
Coal RDF/MSW Sewer
Sludge
___________________________________________________________________
Aluminum 17000
Arsenic 0.1 15 4 1
Barium 2600
Berylium
0.03 3
Cadmium 0.30 0.07-16 8 64
Chromium 0.14 23 80 1372
Copper 0.20 16 300 855
Lead 0.6 14 380 1160
Mercury 0.06 0.10-0.30 1
&
3 6
Manganese 0.16 80 170 128
Nickel 10.0 18 60 153
Selenium 3 1 2
Silver 0.3
Thallium 25
Thorium 3.1
Uranium 1.3-2.3
Vanadium 5.7 100 28 26
Zinc 0.8 40 600 1372
source‑ for Eastern
coal: average of averages quoted by
(1)
Radian
Corporation,Estimating
Air Toxics
Emissisions
from Coal and Oil Combustion
Sources,
U.S. EPA, 1989(NTIS PB89-194229).
& (2) California Air Resources Board,
1989.
for all
other
fuels(
2)