Wildfire smoke is likely poisoning killer whales, study finds

By Todd Woody | Bloomberg

As climate-driven wildfires spiral out of control, scientists have shown for the first time that toxic smoke is likely poisoning killer whales off North America’s west coast.

Researchers at the University of British Columbia found that polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) generated from “petrogenic” sources — such as oil spills and burning fossil fuels — and “pyrogenic” sources like forest fires are contaminating muscle and liver tissues of two types of imperiled killer whales, or orcas.

“Our research shows it’s likely that these killer whales are being exposed to chemicals from these sources,” said Kiah Lee, the paper’s lead author, who conducted the research while she was a student at the University of British Columbia.

PAHs from petrogenic sources were found in critically endangered Southern Resident killer whales, which live along the coast between Washington state and British Columbia, making them susceptible to pollution from fossil fuel refineries, vehicle exhaust and oil spills. With only 75 individuals left, every Southern Resident birth is crucial to the population’s survival. But in a troubling sign, the researchers discovered that the fish-eating apex predators are transferring carcinogenic PAHs to their unborn calves, according to the paper published Dec. 19 in the journal Scientific Reports.

“It’s really important for policymakers to take that into consideration when looking at oil and pipeline development along our coast,” Lee said.

RELATED: Orcas spotted hunting gray whale, dolphins off California coast — seventh sighting since December

PAHs associated with forest fires and other pyrogenic sources were found in marine mammal-eating Bigg’s killer whales, also known as transient killer whales. A threatened species in Canada, Bigg’s orcas roam the Pacific Ocean from Alaska to Mexico and tend to live away from coastal infrastructure. Those migratory patterns, combined with the reach of wind-blown wildfire smoke, make the threat posed by PAHs particularly wide-ranging.

“California has really been impacted by wildfires and so that could be a reason why we found that Bigg’s killer whales had more PAHs that were linked to pyrogenic sources,” said Lee, who is currently a master’s student at the University of Oslo.

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