This study is the first to look at caffeine pollution off the Oregon
coast. It was developed and conducted by Portland State University
master's student Zoe Rodriguez del Rey and her faculty adviser Elise
Granek, assistant professor of Environmental Science and Management, in
collaboration with Steve Sylvester of Washington State University,
Vancouver.
In spring 2010, Rodriguez del Rey and Granek collected and analyzed
samples from 14 coastal locations and seven adjacent water bodies as far
north as Astoria, Ore., and as far south as Brookings.
Locations were identified as potentially polluted if they were near
wastewater treatment plants, large population centers or rivers and
streams emptying into the ocean.
The study found high caffeine levels near Carl Washburne State Park
(Florence, Ore.) and Cape Lookout, two areas not near the potential
pollution sources, yet low levels of caffeine near large population
centers like Astoria/Warrenton and Coos Bay.
High levels were also found following a late-season storm of wind and rain that triggered sewer overflows.
Results of the study were published in the July 2012 Marine Pollution Bulletin, "Occurrence and concentration of caffeine in Oregon coastal waters."
The results seem to indicate that wastewater treatment plants are
effective at removing caffeine, but that high rainfall and combined
sewer overflows flush the contaminants out to sea. The results also
suggest that septic tanks, such as those used at the state parks, may be
less effective at containing pollution.
"Our study findings indicate that, contrary to our prediction, the
waste water treatment plants are not a major source of caffeine to
coastal waters," says Granek. "However, onsite waste disposal systems
may be a big contributor of contaminants to Oregon's coastal ocean and
need to be better studied to fully understand their contribution to
pollution of ocean waters."
Caffeine is found in many food and beverage products as well as some
pharmaceuticals, and caffeine pollution is directly related to human
activity (although many plant species produce caffeine, there are no
natural sources of the substance in the Northwest). The presence of
caffeine may also signal additional anthropogenic pollution, such as
pesticides, pharmaceuticals and other contaminants.
Even "elevated levels" of caffeine are measured in nanograms per
liter, well below a lethal dose for marine life. However, an earlier
study by Rodriguez del Rey and Granek on intertidal mussels showed that
caffeine at the levels measured in this current study can still have an
effect despite the lower doses
"We humans drink caffeinated beverages because caffeine has a
biological effect on us -- so it isn't too surprising that caffeine
affects other animals, too," says Granek. Previous studies have found
caffeine in other bodies of water around the world, including the North
Sea, the Mediterranean, Puget Sound, Boston Harbor, and Sarasota Bay,
Fla.
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