Sunscreens Go Viral and Kill Coral Reefs

NC Susan

Deceased
Sunscreens Go Viral On Coral


Ingredients in commonly used sun-protection products bleach reefs by stimulating latent viruses in algae

http://www.healthy.net/scr/news.asp?Id=9631

By ROBERT WEINHOLD
Environmental Science and Technology, January 23, 2008
Straight to the Source

The biological integrity of about 60% of the world's coral reefs is under assault, and the percentage of threatened reefs is expected to continue rising. Coral bleaching, which indicates the death of colored symbiotic algae that provide nutrients to coral, is a visible sign of this damage.

New suspects in the bleaching process include four commonly used sunscreen ingredients that routinely wash off into water, according to a team of Italian researchers who published their study online January 3 in Environmental Health Perspectives (2008, DOI 10.1289/ehp.10966). The ingredients killed the algae within just 4 days at very low levels, at or below what would be observed with typical usage by swimmers worldwide. The team says this is the first evidence linking sunscreens to coral bleaching.

The problematic ingredients included a paraben preservative and three types of UV filters-a cinnamate, a benzophenone, and a camphor derivative. The researchers conclude that these compounds likely kill algae by stimulating latent viruses that have been found in almost all classes of coral-inhabiting algae. The number of viruses in seawater surrounding coral samples exposed to the ingredients increased as much as 15-fold, and viruslike particles were found in and around the algae. All sunscreen brands, sun-protection factors, and concentrations tested bleached the coral.

The researchers used field and laboratory analyses to evaluate more than half a dozen coral species from sites in the Red Sea, the Caribbean Sea, the Andaman Sea in the Indian Ocean, and the Celebes Sea in Indonesia. They calculate that approximately 10% of the world's coral reefs are potentially threatened by about 4000-6000 metric tons of sunscreen that annually wash off swimmers in these and other reef waters. The rapid expansion of tourism in reef areas suggests to the researchers that destruction is likely to worsen unless sunscreen formulations that are safer for the coral are developed.

Copyright © 2008 American Chemical Society


Provided by Organic Consumers Association on 1/23/2008​
 

grommit

Senior Member
First there was Global Warming

Now, Global Screening. Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water.

(Actually, first there was the threat of a new ice age, but we are not allowed to talk about that...)
 
Yes, but the stuff is perfectly safe to rub all over and to ingest through your body's largest organ, your skin. / sarcasm off /

Really, I cannot believe people put this crap on their skin, most especially on their defenseless children's skin. Feed them Cod Liver oil, folks, and they won't burn.

Tras
 

Y2kO

Inactive
The problematic ingredients included a paraben preservative and three types of UV filters-a cinnamate, a benzophenone, and a camphor derivative.

And parabens (methyl-, ethyl-, and propyl-) also cause cancer and are frequently found in cancerous tumors. Don't buy anything containing the parabens. (Good luck finding a shampoo that isn't loaded with it.) I only recently found a line of skin moisturiizers (Derma e') that doesn't contain it.

You can use powdered vitamin C (in water or oil) as a sunscreen.
 

Hermit

Inactive
It seems a little farfetched to me to blame a tiny concentration of sunscreen for bleaching coral, but I don't trust those chemicals either. It's best to simply stay out of direct sunlight when possible, wear broadrimmed hats and protective clothing, and stay under beach umbrellas or trees. If you go swimming, do so in the early morning or near sunset when the UV is lowest.
 
You're wrong, Hermit. The sun is not only very very good for you, but we didn't have this whole "epidemic proportion" outbreak of melanomas before they began widespread use of this crap. There is no extraordinary "ozone hole" (it's always been there), and even the mineral oil they rubbed on when I was a kid is death.
I'm not stating there isn't anyone hyper-sensitive to sunlight, but the exposure thing has been totally overblown to sell tons of worthless poisonous goop. Resist the brainwash.

Tras
 

Hermit

Inactive
Sunshine is both good for you and bad for you, Trasael, which is why I said to stay out of direct sunlight. Indirect sunlight should give you enough of the benefits such as vitamin D, without as much risk of skin cancer.

When the ozone hole opened up over Australia, from what I remember they did indeed get an epidemic of melanomas a few years later. And it's known that skin cancers of all types are mostly found on sun exposed areas such as the face and back of the hands.

So there has to be a balance, it's not sunlight is good vs sunlight is evil.
 

Y2kO

Inactive
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/a...f-sunshine-causes-600-000-cancers-a-year.aspx

Lack of Sunshine Causes One Million Deaths a Year
If vitamin D3 levels among populations worldwide were increased, 600,000 cases of breast and colorectal cancers could be prevented each year, according to researchers from the Moores Cancer Center at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD).

This includes nearly 150,000 cases of cancer that could be prevented in the United States alone.

The researchers estimate that 250,000 cases of colorectal cancer and 350,000 cases of breast cancer could be prevented worldwide by increasing intake of vitamin D3, particularly in countries north of the equator.

The study examines the dose-response relationship between vitamin D and cancer, and is the first to use satellite measurements of sun and cloud cover in countries where blood serum levels of vitamin D3 were also taken.

Serum vitamin D levels during the winter from 15 countries were combined, then applied to 177 countries to estimate the average serum level of a vitamin D metabolite among the population.

An inverse association between serum vitamin D and the risk of colorectal and breast cancers was found.

Protective effects began when 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels (the main indicator of vitamin D status) ranged from 24 to 32 nanograms per milliliter (ng/ml). In the United States, late winter 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels ranged from 15 to 18 ng/ml.

Previous research has suggested that raising levels to 55 ng/ml was actually optimal to prevent cancer, the researchers said.

To increase your vitamin D3 levels, the researchers recommended a combination of dietary methods, supplements and sunlight exposure of about 10 to 15 minutes a day, with at least 40 percent of your skin exposed.

Note: However, nearly all the prescription-based supplements contain synthetic vitamin D2, which was first produced in the 1920s through ultraviolet exposure of foods. The process was patented and licensed to drug companies for use in prescription vitamins. In case you didn't know, the vitamin D that is added to milk is NOT D3 but the highly inferior vitamin D2.
 

Hermit

Inactive
Codliver oil is a natural source of vitamin D that also has several other benefits from the omega 3 fatty acids (such as preventing heart disease, reducing asthma, and treating depression.)
 

zoose

Inactive
Sunscreens Go Viral On Coral


Ingredients in commonly used sun-protection products bleach reefs by stimulating latent viruses in algae

http://www.healthy.net/scr/news.asp?Id=9631

By ROBERT WEINHOLD
Environmental Science and Technology, January 23, 2008
Straight to the Source

The biological integrity of about 60% of the world's coral reefs is under assault, and the percentage of threatened reefs is expected to continue rising. Coral bleaching, which indicates the death of colored symbiotic algae that provide nutrients to coral, is a visible sign of this damage.

New suspects in the bleaching process include four commonly used sunscreen ingredients that routinely wash off into water, according to a team of Italian researchers who published their study online January 3 in Environmental Health Perspectives (2008, DOI 10.1289/ehp.10966). The ingredients killed the algae within just 4 days at very low levels, at or below what would be observed with typical usage by swimmers worldwide. The team says this is the first evidence linking sunscreens to coral bleaching.

The problematic ingredients included a paraben preservative and three types of UV filters-a cinnamate, a benzophenone, and a camphor derivative. The researchers conclude that these compounds likely kill algae by stimulating latent viruses that have been found in almost all classes of coral-inhabiting algae. The number of viruses in seawater surrounding coral samples exposed to the ingredients increased as much as 15-fold, and viruslike particles were found in and around the algae. All sunscreen brands, sun-protection factors, and concentrations tested bleached the coral.

The researchers used field and laboratory analyses to evaluate more than half a dozen coral species from sites in the Red Sea, the Caribbean Sea, the Andaman Sea in the Indian Ocean, and the Celebes Sea in Indonesia. They calculate that approximately 10% of the world's coral reefs are potentially threatened by about 4000-6000 metric tons of sunscreen that annually wash off swimmers in these and other reef waters. The rapid expansion of tourism in reef areas suggests to the researchers that destruction is likely to worsen unless sunscreen formulations that are safer for the coral are developed.

Copyright © 2008 American Chemical Society


Provided by Organic Consumers Association on 1/23/2008​

Admin, can we have that HogWash emoticon?
 

Cag3db1rd

Paranoid Heathen
let's not just assume they're lying, ppl. Let's hear them out before we shoot them and send their bodies back to their base camp.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
And parabens (methyl-, ethyl-, and propyl-) also cause cancer and are frequently found in cancerous tumors. Don't buy anything containing the parabens. (Good luck finding a shampoo that isn't loaded with it.) I only recently found a line of skin moisturiizers (Derma e') that doesn't contain it. You can use powdered vitamin C (in water or oil) as a sunscreen.

Can you please list a shampoo brand that does not have this paraben chemical?

Or do we go back to washing hair with a block of ivory soap? to be safe from the chemical industry.
 

grommit

Senior Member
Can you please list a shampoo brand that does not have this paraben chemical?

Or do we go back to washing hair with a block of ivory soap? to be safe from the chemical industry.

Well, I have been washing my hair, and the rest of me, with just Ivory for the last 2 decades.

Of course, I am rather bald.....
 

blackjeep

The end times are here.
Sunscreens have another "benefit", HORMONES. They contain xenoestroegens which warp the proper development of kids and cause numerous problems in anyone who uses these poisons.

Lots of products have real health dangers. It's not by accident, folks.
 
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