Man-made pollutants found in Earth's deepest ocean trenches
Toxic chemicals are accumulating in marine creatures in Earths deepest oceanic trenches, the first measurements of organic pollutants in these regions have revealed.
We often think deep-sea trenches are remote and pristine, untouched by humans, says Alan Jamieson, a deep-ocean researcher at the University of Aberdeen, UK. But Jamieson and his colleagues have found man-made organic pollutants at high levels in shrimp-like crustaceans called amphipods that they collected from two deep-ocean trenches, he told a conference on deep-ocean exploration in Shanghai on 8 June.
Its really surprising to find pollutants so deep in the ocean at such high concentrations, says Jeffrey Drazen, a marine ecologist at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu.