Maine Monitor features Kopec in article about PFAS

Dianne Kopec, faculty fellow at the University of Maine Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions, spoke to the Maine Monitor about PFAS in marine life. Kopec explained that unlike pollutants such as PCBs or DDT, which primarily accumulate within fatty tissue, or mercury, which primarily accumulates in proteins and muscle tissue, PFASs concentrations are highest in the liver, blood and kidneys, and tend to concentrate in wildlife through ingestion of prey and can biomagnify in the food web. “Every contaminant ends up in water … water always flows downhill. It’s all moving down to the ocean,” Kopec said. Undark, Adventure Journal and Salon shared the Maine Monitor report.