SEASONALITY IN EXCHANGE OF ORGANOCHLORINES BETWEEN ARCTIC AIR AND SEAWATER

Citation
Bt. Hargrave et al., SEASONALITY IN EXCHANGE OF ORGANOCHLORINES BETWEEN ARCTIC AIR AND SEAWATER, Environmental science & technology, 31(11), 1997, pp. 3258-3266
Citations number
43
Categorie Soggetti
Environmental Sciences","Engineering, Environmental
ISSN journal
0013936X
Volume
31
Issue
11
Year of publication
1997
Pages
3258 - 3266
Database
ISI
SICI code
0013-936X(1997)31:11<3258:SIEOOB>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Decreases in atmospheric concentrations of organochlorine (OC) pestici des in the Northern Hemisphere during the last decade have resulted in Arctic Ocean surface layer water that is now supersaturated for some compounds. Seasonal measurements of several OCs in air and seawater in the Canadian arctic archipelago during 1993 were made to study change s in air-sea exchange over an annual cycle. Fugacity ratios and Henry' s law constants, with correction for seasonal changes in ice cover, we re used to calculate net air-sea fluxes on a monthly basis. The lack o f concentration gradients between 1 and 50 m indicated that advection of polar mixed layer water flowing southward from under the polar ice cap was an important factor controlling seawater concentrations. Out-g assing of HCHs, HCB, and dieldrin during the ice-free period could hav e lowered surface layer inventories by 4-20%. In contrast, net deposit ion of CHBs, chlordanes, and endosulfan-I during the open water period was equivalent to 50- > 100% of the surface layer inventory. Air-sea fluxes of OCs were influenced by the combined effects of changes in at mospheric vapor pressure and water mass advection. Potential removal o f OCs on sedimenting particles was calculated to be less important in controlling surface layer concentrations.