Are the Great Lakes getting better or worse? – this is the question that the public, scientists and managers are asking the International Joint Commission after a quarter-century of co-operative action by the United States and Canadian governments to clean up the Great Lakes.
Trends in Levels and Effects of Persistent Toxic Substances in the Great Lakes contains papers from the workshop on Environmental Results, hosted in Windsor, Ontario, by the Great Lakes Science Advisory Board of the International Joint Commission, on September 12 and 13, 1996. The Great Lakes have been through almost a century of severe pollution from the manufacture, use and disposal of chemicals. In the 1960s wildlife biologists started to investigate the outbreaks of reproductive failure in fish-eating birds and ranch mink and to link these to exposure to organochlorine compounds.
Human health researchers in the 1980s and 1990s linked growth retardation, behavioural anomalies and deficits in cognitive development with maternal consumption of Great Lakes fish prior to pregnancy. The Great Lakes became the laboratory where the theory of endocrine disruptors was first formulated.
Preface; M. Gilbertson, et al.
- Trends in Concentrations and Effects of Persistent Toxic Contaminants in the Great Lakes: Their Significance for Inferring Cause-Effect Relationships and Validating Management Actions; I.C.T. Nisbet
- Designing the Environmental Results Workshop: Historical Context, Causality and Candidate Species; M. Gilbertson, et al.
- Current Status and Temporal Trends in Concentrations of Persistent Toxic Substances in Sport Fish and Juvenile Forage Fish in the Canadian Waters of the Great Lakes; W.A. Scheider, et al.
- Organochlorine Contaminants in Herring Gull Eggs from the Great Lakes, 1974-1995: Change Point Regression Analysis and Short-Term Regression; C. Pekarik, D.V. Weseloh
- Reproductive and Physiological Effects of Environmental Contaminants in Fish-Eating Birds of the Great Lakes: A Review of Historical Trends; K.A. Grasman, et al.
- Monitoring the Elimination of Persistent Toxic Substances from the Great Lakes: Chemical and Physiological Evidence from Adult Herring Gulls; G.A. Fox, et al.
- Spatial and Temporal Trends in Organochlorine Contamination and Bill Deformities in Double-Crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) from the Canadian Great Lakes; D.P. Ryckman, et al.
- Trends of Contaminants and Effects in Bald Eagles of the Great Lakes Basin; W.W. Bowerman, et al.
- Long Term Trends in Liver Neoplasm Epizootics of Brown Bullhead in the Black River, Ohio; P.C. Baumann, J.C. Harshbarger
- Reptiles and Amphibians: Shy and Sensitive Vertebrates of the Great Lakes Basin and St. Lawrence River; C.A. Bishop, A.D. Gendron
- Human Health Effects of Environmental Pollutants: New Insights. D.O. Carpenter