大象传媒

Key Points

  • Land, water and air are polluted by toxins.
  • Some toxins that pollute the environment build up in higher levels of food chains, causing more harm.
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Pollution

landfill site with machinery on the rubbish
Image caption,
Harmful chemicals can get into the land via rubbish tips

is the release of harmful or poisonous chemicals called into the environment.

Pollution on land

It is extremely important to recycle as much as possible, especially things such as batteries. If batteries are put into the rubbish bin they can end up in where their toxic chemicals may leak out and cause pollution.

Pollution in water

Some factories have been caught illegally pumping waste into rivers and seas. Oil tankers have had accidents and spilled oil into the oceans.

Pollution in the air

Factory chimneys and vehicle exhausts release carbon dioxide and other pollutants into the atmosphere, causing climate change and harm to many forms of life, including humans.

landfill site with machinery on the rubbish
Image caption,
Harmful chemicals can get into the land via rubbish tips
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Bioconcentration

Polluting toxins can be taken in by living things if breathed in, consumed in food or water, or through their skin. Some toxins break down into harmless substances quickly before they can affect living things. Other toxins do not do this and are absorbed by them. Many species can deal with exposure to these toxins in small levels. They do not stay in the organisms and most are.

Some polluting toxins cannot be excreted. These can be taken in by the organisms at the bottom of the in low levels and so the harm is limited. The build up of these toxins is called . These organisms are almost always plants or algae.

The primary consumer which eats the plants or algae, also eats the toxins within it. The toxins in this stage become .

Eventually the eats the animal below it in the food chain as well as the concentrated toxins within it.

Because the toxins cannot be excreted they are found in much higher concentrations in the organism at the top of the food chain, and the effects are much more severe. This build-up of toxins that cannot be excreted at the tops of food chains is .

Video

Can you answer these questions based on the video?

1. Pollution is when what type of substance gets into the environment?

2. Which toxin that bioconcentrates is shown in the video?

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Insecticides: DDT

is an insecticide that can pass up the food chain from insects to small birds, and then from the small birds to birds of prey, like hawks. It bioconcentrates in the birds of prey because it cannot be excreted.

A high concentration of DDT in birds causes weakness in the shells of their eggs, meaning that they are crushed accidentally when being incubated by their parents. DDT is now banned because of this.

Large bird of prey, the Peregrine Falcon, in flight
Image caption,
The population of the peregrine falcon reduced due to the use of DDT
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Mercury

Mercury was used until recently to make and special paints that stop barnacles growing on the hulls of ships.

Unfortunately, when mercury gets into a food chain, it damages the and of mammals, including humans. The diagram shows how mercury can concentrate in the food chain.

plant plankton with traces of mercury, small fish with some mercury, tuna with high concentration of mercury. The higher up the food chain, the more mercury there is in the organism.
Figure caption,
Mercury bioaccumulates in tuna

In the sea, tiny animals and plants called plankton absorb the mercury compounds. When the plankton are eaten by small fish, the mercury they contain stays in the fish because it cannot be excreted. As the fish need to eat a lot of plankton, the concentration of mercury in them becomes higher than the concentration in the plankton.

Larger fish then eat the small fish, and larger ones still (such as tuna) eat them. This creates a high concentration of mercury in the tuna. People eating contaminated tuna may get mercury poisoning. Mercury is now banned from many chemical products and mercury use in industry is carefully regulated.

Find out more about food chains and webs.

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Microplastics

are tiny fragments of plastic smaller than 0.5 cm. These are often formed from larger pieces of plastic, such as drinks bottles and plastic bags, which break down slowly. Plastic does not and so remains in the environment forming smaller and smaller pieces. Some rivers in England have more than half a million of these in each square metre of riverbed.

Eventually these become small enough to be accidentally consumed by living things. They bioconcentrate in food chains because they cannot be excreted. The effects of this build-up are not fully understood yet but seem to cause other chemicals to bioconcentrate as well.

It is so important to recycle all plastics we have to avoid this and live more sustainably.

tiny bits of plastic and sand in a person's hand
Image caption,
Not all microplastics are visible, some are so small they can only be seen with a microscope
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Test your knowledge

Quiz

Test questions

Write a short paragraph for each of the following questions. Tap 'Show answer' to see six points you could have included.

Describe examples of pollution and their effects.

Describe how bioconcentration occurs. Give an example in your answer.

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Play the Atomic Labs game! game

Try out practical experiments in this KS3 science game.

Play the Atomic Labs game!
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More on Humans and the environment

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