Climate change likely to increase human exposure to toxic methylmercury

Researchers developed a first-of-its-kind, comprehensive model that simulates how environmental factors, including increasing sea temperatures and overfishing, impact levels of methylmercury in fish. The researchers found that while the regulation of mercury emissions have successfully reduced methylmercury levels in fish, spiking temperatures are driving those levels back up and will play a major role in the methylmercury levels of marine life in the future.

Source: sciencedaily.com

Related posts

Research on centromere structure yields new insights into the mechanisms of chromosome segregation errors

Research on centromere structure yields new insights into the mechanisms of chromosome segregation errors

Potential power and pitfalls of harnessing artificial intelligence for sleep medicine