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Pollution of the Hudson by PCBs is traced to 1947 and continued for 30 years before being banned. During that period, General Electric Co. plants discharged an estimated 1.3 million pounds of PCBs into the river. Cleanup is continuing. The bottom-feeding tomcod grows to about 10 inches long and lives primarily in rivers. There is no commercial fishing for tomcod, Wirgin said, though some individuals do fish it for sport and it is a popular recreational fish in parts of Canada. And young tomcod are often prey for larger fish, he said, "so certainly there is transfer of PCBs up the food chain." ___ Online: http://www.sciencemag.org/
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