Tris(4-chlorophenyl)methane and tris(4-chlorophenyl)methanol in sediment and food webs from the Baltic south coast

Citation
J. Falandysz et al., Tris(4-chlorophenyl)methane and tris(4-chlorophenyl)methanol in sediment and food webs from the Baltic south coast, ENV SCI TEC, 33(4), 1999, pp. 517-521
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology,"Environmental Engineering & Energy
Journal title
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
ISSN journal
0013936X → ACNP
Volume
33
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
517 - 521
Database
ISI
SICI code
0013-936X(19990215)33:4<517:TATISA>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
Tris(4-chlorophenyl)methane (TCPM-H) and tris(4-chlorophenyl)methanol (TCPM -OH)were identified and quantified in fishes (4.1-37 ng/g lipids), fish-eat ing birds (120-630 ng/g), and marine mammals (13-31 ng/g) from the southern part of the Baltic Sea as well as in the egg and tissues of white-tailed s ea eagles from the Baltic coastal (<13-130000 ng/g) and inland (<1-1500 ng/ g) breeding areas in Poland. TCPM-H and TCPM-OH were absent (<0.3 ng/g lipi ds) in a lower food web organism such as Baltic plankton, blue mussel, and crab and in marine and freshwater surface sediment (<0.3 ng/g dry wt). Both compounds in addition to a suite of organochlorine substances were determi ned using a nondestructive method for extraction and cleanup step with dial ysis throughout a semipermeable polyethylene membrane (SPM) and further fra ctionation of the dialysate aliquot on a Florisil gel column with final sep aration, indentification, and quantification via capillary gas chromatograp hy and low resolution mass spectrometry (HRGC/LRMS). TCPM-H and TCPM-OH qua ntified in higher food web organisms such as white-tailed sea eagles and ha rbor porpoise correlated (p < 0.000001) with DDTs (p,p'-DDT, p,p'-DDD, p,p' -DDE, and p,p'-DDMU) content. There was no correlation (p > 0.05) between T CPM-H/OH and DDTs in black cormorant and also in 11 species of fish, while a positive (p < 0.05) relationship was found for a selected group of fish i ncluding flounder, perch, lamprey, and three-spined stickleback. Similar to fish, marine mammals (such as harbor porpoise), black cormorants, and whit e-tailed sea eagles apparently bioaccumulate and biomagnify TCPM-H/OH. Both TCPM-H and TCPM-OH are enriched in a marine food web to a higher degree th an DDTs, and both these compounds seem to be much more persistent contamina nts under environmental conditions than DDT and its analogues.