BPA is used in everyday life; it’s in canned foods, plastic bottles, and paper. The controversies surrounding this mysterious element are endless, and it’s hard to figure out what the exposure of Bisphenol A can do to not only the human skin, but to the brain of a human. But first, we have to figure out what it does to animals as well. BPA acts like an estrogen, disrupting hormones of any male and female animal on this planet. Not only does it affect the animal’s hormones, it affects its brain as well. The interesting thing about BPA affecting the brain is that it also attacks the core parts of life; memories. Memories are the important things that are stored in the brain, so if BPA affects our memories, then we can’t communicate ideas like …show more content…
The number of animals is from 2 – 50 million. Yes, there’s less animals than there are of humans, but what if both animals and humans were to decrease, you may ask? Well, the Circle of Life is one thing, but to have both animals and humans die at the exact time is dangerously crucial. It’s dangerously crucial because there are 16,306 endangered species threatened with extinction, according to www.endangeredearth.com. If those endangered species die out, in addition to our everyday North American Species of birds and mammals, then we have no chance of survival due to BPA still existing. For humans, women with pregnancies that have high doses of BPA in their bloodstream have an illness called thyroxine, which causes some deficiencies for the thyroid gland, used for healthy growth according to www.sfgate.com. If BPA is from plastic and paper materials, and the paper comes from trees, then what happens to the trees? Of course, the trees die off, but the hydrogen, oxygen and carbon from the trees eventually carry its way to the paper and to the plastic as well, which is known as a