|
Historically,
concern about the state of the oceans has mainly been
generated by pollution. Over the last decades, increasing
understanding of the seriousness of other threats - such
as overfishing and the destruction of habitats – and of
the damage they cause, has tended to overshadow it. But it
has enormous effects on health and the environment.
Many studies
show that respiratory and intestinal diseases and
infections among bathers rise steadily in step with the
amount of sewage pollution in the water. They demonstrate,
too, that bathers are at risk even in lightly contaminated
waters that meet the pollution standards laid down by the
European Union and the US Environmental Protection Agency.
A recent WHO report has estimated that one in every 20
bathers in “acceptable waters”, will become ill after
venturing just once into the sea.
The GESAMP/WHO study - based on global
estimates of the number of tourists who bathe, and WHO
estimates of the relative risks at various levels of
contamination - estimates that bathing in polluted seas
causes some 250 million cases of gastroenteritis and
upper respiratory disease every year. Some of these people
will be disabled over the longer term. The global impact
can be measured by adding up the total years of healthy
life that are lost through disease, disability and death
using a new measurement - the Disability Adjusted Life
Year (DALY) – developed by WHO and the World Bank. When
this is done, the world-wide burden of disease incurred by
bathing in the sea, adds up to some 400,000 DALYs,
comparable to the global impacts of diphtheria and
leprosy. It is estimate to cost society, worldwide, about
US $1.6 billion a year1 The toll from consuming
contaminated shellfish is even greater. One study suggests
that seafood is involved in 11 per cent of all the
outbreaks of disease carried in food in the United
States, 20 per cent of them in Australia, and over 70 per
cent in Japan, which has a particularly strong tradition
of eating raw fish and shellfish. Pathogenic bacteria can
survive in the sea for days and weeks; viruses can survive
in the water - or in fish and shellfish - for months. The
particularly virulent infectious hepatitis virus - which
has caused many outbreaks of the disease associated with
eating shellfish - can remain viable in the sea for over a
year. Shellfish, like oysters, mussels, clams and cockles,
feed by filtering huge amounts of seawater - and can
concentrate viruses and bacteria a hundredfold from the
water in which they live.
A series of studies has found viruses in
about a fifth of the shellfish taken from waters that meet
US bacteriological standards for growing and harvesting
them. There is strong evidence that fresh shellfish - on
sale for food -frequently contain enough viruses to make
many of those who eat them ill. They are often eaten raw,
or after only a light steaming which is not enough to kill
most of the viruses or bacteria.
One US study suggested
that one in every hundred people eating relatively lightly
contaminated raw shellfish will be infected with a
moderately serious intestinal virus disease; the risk
rises to up to 50 in a 100 if the virus is highly
infectious. Other studies in both the United States and
the United Kingdom suggest that a quarter of those who are
taken to hospital suffering from infectious hepatitis - a
disease that can confine sufferers to bed for two to three
months - have caught it from eating raw or lightly steamed
shellfish.
Some eight billion
meals of shellfish are thought to be eaten worldwide each
year. The GESAMP/WHO study estimates that eating
sewage-contaminated shellfish raw causes some 2.5 million
cases of infectious hepatitis each year. Some 25,000 of
the victims die and another 25,000 suffer long-term
disability from liver damage. The global burden on human
health equals some 3.2 million DALYs a year - comparable
to the worldwide impact of all upper respiratory
infections and intestinal worm diseases – and costs world
society some US$ 10 billion annually.
This
new evidence of the dangers of sewage pollution is just
one example of a general reappraisal of the relative
importance of different pollutants of the sea. Some of
those once thought to be the most damaging worldwide are
now believed to be much less important, either because
more is known about them or because they have been brought
under control.
-
The supposed effects of man-made
radionuclides discharged into the sea still loom large
in the minds of the general public and politicians.
Although threats from accidental releases cannot be
ruled out, radionuclides now probably worry scientists
less than any other category of marine pollutants.
-
Similarly, highly publicised and
exaggerated concerns about the extent of contamination
of the seas and their life by heavy metals cannot be
justified; it is probably far less serious than
pollution by nutrients and some persistent organic
chemicals.
-
The effects of even the most dramatic
oil spills are generally localised; gross pollution from
them disappears relatively rapidly, though some subtle
effects may last for decades, with enormous economic
costs.
-
Some eight billion meals of shellfish
are thought to be eaten worldwide each year. The GESAMP/WHO
study estimates that eating sewage-contaminated
shellfish raw causes some 2.5 million cases of
infectious hepatitis each year. Some 25,000 of the
victims die, and another 25,000 suffer long-term
disability from liver damage. The global burden on human
health equals some 3.2 million DALYs a year - comparable
to the worldwide impact of all upper respiratory
infections and intestinal worm diseases – and costs
world society some US$ 10 billion annually.
Until recently, most attention
concentrated on pollutants which directly or indirectly
poisoned sea life and those consuming it - or were
suspected of doing so. Less attention was paid to the
potential effects of the persistent organic chemicals,
some of which may have much more subtle, but possibly even
more damaging effects. These include changes in the
structure and function of communities of marine life,
through disrupting reproduction and altering behaviour,
and effects at the molecular level, such as causing cancer
or mutations or disrupting endocrine systems. Evidence
that concentrations of these substances now in the marine
environment are causing such effects is mostly
inconclusive. Risks to human health usually only occur
where concentrations are high, or where people are exposed
to them in unusual ways, such as in the Arctic where fish
and seafood form an extremely high percentage of the diet.
It is now well-established that some
chemicals can harm the endocrine systems of a wide range
of wildlife species, both on land and at sea, and may give
rise to strange ‘genderbending’ effects. Tributyl tin, for
example - which has been widely used in anti-fouling
coatings on ships and in fish farming - appears to have
made female sea snails grow false penises, and to have
severely affected oyster fisheries in some areas. Its use
has now been restricted in most developed countries, but
it is still being traded in some markets. It is possible
that other environmental contaminants could ‘sneak up on
us’, causing further unexpected effects.
A group of researchers has
found a connection between ocean temperatures and cholera
outbreaks, and plans to test the model worldwide for
predicting the incidence of the deadly water-borne
disease.
Using
data from three ocean-monitoring satellites, the
scientists found that increased sea-surface temperatures
correlated with cholera outbreaks in Calcutta. Higher
temperatures make the coastal waters "bloom" with plankton
that carries the deadly cholera bacteria.
Now the plan is to merge ocean temperature forecasts
with proven public health measures for reducing the
incidence of cholera -- such as instructing residents who
drink hazardous water to filter it first through layers of
cloth.
Cholera is a bacterial infection that affects mainly
the small intestine and can be fatal. In 1993, a total of
296,206 new cases were reported in South America. Most
cholera outbreaks start in coastal areas.
Huq worked with Rita Colwell, director of the National
Science Foundation, and others on the research, recently
published as a paper in PNAS (Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences).
Huq,
Colwell and their colleagues studied satellite data and
found that rising sea temperatures and ocean height near
the coast of Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal from 1992 to
1995 often preceded sudden growth of plankton and the
cholera outbreaks.
The group correlated years of hospital cholera records
from Bangladesh with sea temperature and ocean height data
that came from a variety of satellites and sea-surface
observations.
The satellites, including the U.S.- French TOPEX/Poseidon
oceanography satellite, measured water temperature and
ocean height, as well as colors that indicated plankton
growth.
Scientists believe that sea height also affects cholera
outbreaks because tides reach further inland to affect
more people who drink or bathe in brackish water carrying
cholera.
"Bangladesh is very low and flat," said co-author
Louisa Beck of California State University at Monterey Bay
and a resident scientist at Ames, "and tidal effects are
felt almost halfway up into the country."
Scientists have used similar approaches with satellite
data to study malaria, Lyme disease and Rift Valley fever.
If the model that worked in Bangladesh could be
extended globally, it could serve as an early warning
system, said Brad Lobitz, a scientist at the NASA Ames
Research Center, and the lead researcher on the project.
Once alerted to rising temperatures in coastal waters,
public-health officials could issue warnings to prevent or
respond to the spread of cholera, such as instructing and
reminding people about cloth filters, Huq said.
"When four folds of a sari are used as a filter, 99
percent of the attached bacteria onto plankton and
particles are removed," Huq said. Huq has demonstrated the
method with women in the area where data were collected
for the study.
|