Germ-killing chemical from soaps, toothpaste building up in dolphins

Triclosan is the germ-killing chemical of choice in hundreds of products, including liquid hand soaps, toothpaste and deodorants. Now some scientists are calling for its removal from consumer products because it is building up in the ocean's food web. A new study found that one-third of the bottlenose dolphins tested off South Carolina and almost one-quarter of those tested off Florida carried traces of triclosan in their blood. The concentrations found in ... Full Story »

Posted by Dwight Rousu
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Subjects: World, Sci/Tech
Member Tags: Chemicals, Antibiotics, Ecosystems
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Posted by: Posted by Dwight Rousu - Aug 12, 2009 - 10:31 PM PDT
Content Type: Article
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Edited by: Dwight Rousu - Aug 12, 2009 - 10:31 PM PDT
Dwight Rousu
4.3
by Dwight Rousu - Aug. 13, 2009

The article gives a good picture of the dangers of unintended and untested side effects of chemicals that enter out water supplies.

Quit using soaps and shampoos and toothpaste that contain unnecessary chemicals and dyes. A short web search will help you find them if your local store is hopeless.

Even without triclosan, dolphins carry a chemical cocktail of toxic substances in their bodies. Several other compounds that have built up in ocean animals already have ... More »

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