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  • Uptake of hydrophobic organic compounds, including organochlorine pesticides, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, and perfluoroalkyl acids in fish and blue crabs of the lower Passaic River, New Jersey, USA.

    Mohammed A. Khairy
    First Published: 14 March 2019

    The bioavailability and bioaccumulation of sedimentary hydrophobic organic compounds (HOCs) is of concern at contaminated sites. Passive samplers have emerged as a promising tool to measure the bioavailability of sedimentary HOCs and possibly to estimate their bioaccumulation. The study thus analyzed HOCs including organochlorine pesticides (OCPs), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins/furans (PCDD/Fs) in sediment, porewater, and river water using low-density polyethylene passive samplers and in 11 different finfish species and blue crab from the lower Passaic River. In addition, perfluorinated alkyl acids (PFAAs) were measured in grab water samples, sediment, and fish. Best predictors of bioaccumulation in biota were either porewater concentrations (for PCBs and OCPs) or sediment organic carbon (PBDEs and PFAAs), including black carbon (OCPs, PCBs, and some PCDD/F congeners)–normalized concentrations. Measured lipid-based concentrations of the majority of HOCs exceeded the chemicals’ activities in porewater by at least 2-fold, suggesting dietary uptake. Trophic magnification factors were >1 for moderately hydrophobic analytes with low metabolic transformation rates, including longer alkyl chain PFAAs. For analytes with lower and higher log octanol–water partitioning coefficients, metabolic transformation was more important in reducing trophic magnification.

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Uptake of hydrophobic organic compounds, including organochlorine pesticides, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, and perfluoroalkyl acids in fish and blue crabs of the lower Passaic River, New Jersey, USA

Mohammed A. Khairy, Gregory O. Noonan, Rainer Lohmann, 
  • 5 January 2019
  • 10.1002/etc.4354
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