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Frog
Joins Chemical Warfare
The
battle between chemical companies and environmentalists over chlorine
has a new player. And he's getting jumpy.
Groups like Greenpeace
want to rid the world of chlorine. Trouble is, nature won't comply.
"It would be like banning photosynthesis or gravity," says Dartmouth
College chemist Gordon Gribble. Hundreds of animals and organisms
manufacture chlorine compounds, like cockroaches and seaweed. And
frogs.
The PR potential of this
naturally occurring chlorine isn't lost on producers like Dow Chemical
and Britain's ICI, which are fighting back with a campaign touting
the wonders of the chemical. Their poster child: Epipedobates tricolor,
an Ecuadorian tree frog nicknamed Chlement. Get it? The frog produces
a chlorine compound called epibatidine, a painkiller up to 1,000
times more powerful than morphine but without the addictive side
effects. (Unfortunately, epibatidine is as yet unavailable at your
pharmacy or elsewhere.)
To the environmental
crowd, Chlement has about as much charm as Joe Camel. "Nature isn't
making and dumping chlorine chemicals upstream from fish stocks,"
says Greenpeace's Mark Floegel. But scientists like Gribble point
out that the chlorine industry has come a long way. DDT and PCBs,
the most notorious members of the chlorine family, have been banned.
And paper companies have switched to chlorine dioxide, a less harmful
form of the chemical. But Chlement won't be hopping to peace talks
soon. "There isn't any common ground," says Floegel. "We're trying
to put those companies out of business."
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