RADIOFREQUENCY FIELDS: A NEW ECOLOGICAL FACTOR
J. Bigu Del Blanco, C. Romero-Sierra, J. A. Tanner
RF radiation should be recognized as a fundamental ecological factor affecting all life due to its biological interactions and exponentially increasing environmental presence.
Plain English Summary
This research paper argues that radio frequency (RF) fields should be considered a fundamental ecological factor affecting all living systems. The author presents evidence showing RF radiation interacts with biological systems while background RF levels continuously increase from growing wireless technology use.
Why This Matters
This paper represents an important shift in how we think about RF radiation - not just as a potential health concern, but as a pervasive environmental factor that now affects every ecosystem on Earth. The reality is that background RF levels have increased exponentially since wireless technology proliferated, creating what amounts to a new form of environmental pollution that didn't exist for most of human evolution. What makes this particularly significant is the recognition that RF fields interact with biological systems across species, suggesting these effects aren't limited to humans using devices directly. The science demonstrates that we've fundamentally altered the electromagnetic environment of our planet, and this paper calls for acknowledging RF as an ecological force comparable to other environmental factors like temperature, humidity, or chemical pollutants.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{radiofrequency_fields_a_new_ecological_factor_g6838,
author = {J. Bigu Del Blanco and C. Romero-Sierra and J. A. Tanner},
title = {RADIOFREQUENCY FIELDS: A NEW ECOLOGICAL FACTOR},
year = {n.d.},
}