“…Field-based studies on false killer whale blubber (Pseudorca crassidens) and white whale liver have suggested that CYP1A1 expression may be suppressed in the most polluted individuals (Foltz et al, 2014;Wilson et al, 2005). However, several cetacean studies have also reported higher CYP1A levels in animals with higher tissue levels of pollutants (mainly ΣPCBs or planar PCBs) (Fossi et al, 2010;Noël et al, 2014;Panti et al, 2011;White et al, 1994;Wilson et al, 2005), while no significant correlation was found between CYP1A in the skin and levels of ΣPCBs or subgroups of PCBs in the blubber of Cuvier's beaked whale (Ziphius cavirostris) (Baini et al, 2020), or between CYP1A1 levels in skin and ΣPCB and ΣDDT levels in blubber of low polluted (ΣPCBs: 0.42-3.97 ug g − 1 lw) killer whales from Antarctica (Panti et al, 2022). The POP Fig.…”