biomagnification
noun
bio·mag·ni·fi·ca·tion
¦bī-(ˌ)ō-ˌmag-nə-fə-¦kā-shən
: the process by which a compound (such as a pollutant or pesticide) increases its concentration in the tissues of organisms as it travels up the food chain
In a process known as biomagnification, fish accumulate mercury more rapidly than they excrete it, and every fish up the aquatic food chain contains more than the one it just ate.—Bronwyn Garrity, Vogue, May 2009
biomagnify
verb, transitive + intransitive
biomagnified; biomagnifying; biomagnifies
In addition, litter leaches toxins into the water and soil. These toxins can be biomagnified, meaning the pollutant is concentrated ten times with each step up in the food chain from plankton to humans.
—Jennifer Fankhauser, Kern Valley Sun (Lake Isabella, California), 1 Aug. 2012
Mercury is a persistent contaminant that biomagnifies up the food web, causing mortality, reproductive failure, and other health effects in predatory wildlife and humans …
—Daniel A. Cristol et al., Science, 18 Apr. 2008
Love words? Need even more definitions?
Merriam-Webster unabridged
Share