Record Details

Atmospherically Deposited PBDEs, Pesticides, PCBs, and PAHs in Western U.S. National Park Fish: Concentrations and Consumption Guidelines

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Atmospherically Deposited PBDEs, Pesticides, PCBs, and PAHs in Western U.S. National Park Fish: Concentrations and Consumption Guidelines
Names Ackerman, Luke K. (creator)
Schwindt, Adam R. (creator)
Simonich, Staci L. Massey (creator)
Koch, Dan C. (creator)
Blett, Tamara F. (creator)
Schreck, Carl B. (creator)
Kent, Michael L. (creator)
Landers, Dixon H. (creator)
Date Issued 2008-02-21 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the American Chemical Society and can be found at: http://pubs.acs.org/journal/esthag.
Abstract Concentrations of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs),
pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons were measured in 136 fish from 14 remote
lakes in 8 western U.S. National Parks/Preserves between
2003 and 2005 and compared to human and wildlife contaminant
health thresholds. A sensitive (median detection limit, -18
pg/g wet weight), efficient (61% recovery at 8 ng/g), reproducible
(4.1% relative standard deviation (RSD)), and accurate (7%
deviation from standard reference material (SRM)) analytical
method was developed and validated for these analyses.
Concentrations of PCBs, hexachlorobenzene, hexachlorocyclohexanes,
DDTs, and chlordanes in western U.S. fish were
comparable to or lower than mountain fish recently collected
from Europe, Canada, and Asia. Dieldrin and PBDE concentrations
were higher than recent measurements in mountain
fish and Pacific Ocean salmon. Concentrations of most
contaminants in western U.S. fish were 1–6 orders of magnitude
below calculated recreational fishing contaminant health
thresholds. However, lake average contaminant concentrations
in fish exceeded subsistence fishing cancer thresholds in 8
of 14 lakes and wildlife contaminant health thresholds for
piscivorous birds in 1 of 14 lakes. These results indicate that atmospherically deposited organic contaminants can accumulate
in high elevation fish, reaching concentrations relevant to
human and wildlife health.
Genre Article
Identifier Ackerman, L. K., Schwindt, A. R., Massey Simonich, S. L., Koch, D. C., Blett, T. F., Schreck, C. B., ... & Landers, D. H. (2008). Atmospherically deposited PBDEs, pesticides, PCBs, and PAHs in Western US National Park fish: Concentrations and consumption guidelines. Environmental Science & Technology, 42(7), 2334-2341. doi:10.1021/es702348j

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