Amount of
DDT in tissue
75.5 ppm Tertiary consumer(ring-billed gull)
Secondary consumer
(Atlantic needlefish)
Secondary consumer
(American eel)
Primary consumer
(shrimp)
Producer and
primary consumer
(algae and other
plankton)
Water
2.07 ppm
0.28 ppm
0.16 ppm
0.04 ppm
0.00005 ppm
Trophic level
1,510,000
times
increase
DDE (ppm, dry weight)*
1966
Year
*DDT is converted to DDE in the birds’ bodies
Mean number of young per breeding area
1.3
1.0
0.7
0.4
0.1
130
100
70
40
10
1968 1970 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980
DDE residue in eagle eggs
Mean number of young
per breeding area
DDT ban
Reproductive
success
improved
after DDT
levels
decreased
Data from Grier, JW “Ban of DDT and subsequent recovery of reproduction in bald eagles.”
Science (1982)
Data from Woodwell, G. M., C. F. Worster Jr. and P. A. Isaacson. “DDT
residues in an east coast sanctuary: a case of biological concentration
of persistent insecticide,” Science 156 (May 12, 1967).
Klaus Nigge/NG Image Collection
James Hager/Robert Harding World Imagery/Getty Images
b. A bald eagle feeds its chicks.
a. A comparison of the number of successful bald eagle offspring
with the level of DDT residues in their eggs. (Grier, 1982).
d. Note how the level of DDT, expressed as parts per
million, increased in the tissues of various organisms
as DDT moved through the food chain from producers
to consumers (bottom to top of figure). The ring-billed
gull at the top of the food chain had approximately 1.5
million times more DDT in its tissues than the water
contained (Woodwell et al., 1967).
c. A ring-billed gull forages on a beach.
82 CHAPTER 4 Risk Analysis and Environmental Health Hazards
Environmental InSight ✓✓THE PLANNER
Bioaccumulation and
biomagnificationÊ UÊ }ÕÀiÊ{°n
Effects of DDT on birds
Biological magnification of DDT
on a Long Island salt marsh
Interpreting Data
In which year was the DDE level
in eagle eggs the highest? What
was the level in that year?