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Chemical and biological availability of sediment-sorbed hydrophobic organic contaminants

The ability to predict accumulation levels of sediment‐sorbed hydrophobic organic contaminants (HOCs) by depositfeeding organisms based on sediment concentrations is limited in part by an incomplete understanding of the chemistry that controls assimilation efficiency. This study was designed to test...

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Published in:Environmental toxicology and chemistry 1999-08, Vol.18 (8), p.1733-1741
Main Authors: Lamoureux, Elizabeth M., Brownawell, Bruce J.
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Brownawell, Bruce J.
description The ability to predict accumulation levels of sediment‐sorbed hydrophobic organic contaminants (HOCs) by depositfeeding organisms based on sediment concentrations is limited in part by an incomplete understanding of the chemistry that controls assimilation efficiency. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that desorption is an important process that controls the bioavailability of HOCs to deposit‐feeding organisms; we planned to do so by conducting desorption and bioavailability experiments with field‐contaminated sediments collected from New York Harbor, New York, USA. Three classes of organic contaminants, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and linear alkylbenzenes (LABs) were studied. In order to address the effects of contaminant aging, we compared the contaminant desorption rates from sediments collected from surface and at depth in an area of known high‐sediment accumulation to retarded intraparticle model predictions. Measured desorption rates of the LABs and the most hydrophobic PCBs compare well with model predictions. However, the PAH and less hydrophobic PCB desorption rates range from one to four orders of magnitude slower than model predictions. We postulate that these compounds are present in a resistant sedimentary phase and may represent only a small fraction of what was originally sorbed. The fraction of PCBs, PAHs, and LABs desorbed after 48 h correlate well with measured biota‐sediment factors (BSFs) in Yoldia limatula that were exposed to the same sediments, indicating that desorption rate‐limited assimilation. Several studies have related field BSFs with log Kow and have observed a maximum at intermediate Kows (∼6.0‐6.5). This maximum may be due to predictably slow desorption of high‐Kow compounds and may be lower than predicted rates and extent of desorption of the low‐Kow compounds because of association with resistant phases.
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source Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection
subjects Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Applied sciences
Bioavailability
Biological and medical sciences
Biological and physicochemical properties of pollutants. Interaction in the soil
Desorption
Earth sciences
Earth, ocean, space
Ecotoxicology, biological effects of pollution
Effects of pollution and side effects of pesticides on protozoa and invertebrates
Engineering and environment geology. Geothermics
Exact sciences and technology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Linear alkylbenzenes
Pollution
Pollution, environment geology
Polychlorinated biphenyls
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
Soil and sediments pollution
title Chemical and biological availability of sediment-sorbed hydrophobic organic contaminants
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