Literature DB >> 21788067

Biota: sediment partitioning of aluminium smelter related PAHs and pulp mill related diterpenes by intertidal clams at Kitimat, British Columbia.

Mark B Yunker1, Cara L Lachmuth, Walter J Cretney, Brian R Fowler, Neil Dangerfield, Linda White, Peter S Ross.   

Abstract

The question of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) bioavailability and its relationship to specific PAH sources with different PAH binding characteristics is an important one, because bioavailability drives PAH accumulation in biota and ultimately the biochemical responses to the PAH contaminants. The industrial harbour at Kitimat (British Columbia, Canada) provides an ideal location to study the bioavailability and bioaccumulation of sediment hydrocarbons to low trophic level biota. Samples of soft shell clams (Mya arenaria) and intertidal sediment collected from multiple sites over six years at various distances from an aluminium smelter and a pulp and paper mill were analysed for 106 PAHs, plant diterpenes and other aromatic fraction hydrocarbons. Interpretation using PAH source ratios and multivariate data analysis reveals six principal hydrocarbon sources: PAHs in coke, pitch and emissions from anode combustion from the aluminium smelter, vascular plant terpenes and aromatised terpenes from the pulp and paper mill, petroleum PAHs from shipping and other anthropogenic activities and PAHs from natural plant detritus. Harbour sediments predominantly contain either pitch or pyrogenic PAHs from the smelter, while clams predominantly contain plant derived PAHs and diterpenes from the adjacent pulp mill. PAHs from the smelter have low bioavailability to clams (Biota-Sediment Accumulation Factors; BSAFs <1 for pitch and coke; <10 for anode combustion, decreasing to ∼0.1 for the mass 300 and 302 PAHs), possibly due to binding to pitch or soot carbon matrices. Decreases in PAH isomer ratios between sediments and clams likely reflect a combination of variation in uptake kinetics of petroleum PAHs and compound specific metabolism, with the importance of petroleum PAHs decreasing with increasing molecular weight. Plant derived compounds exhibit little natural bioaccumulation at reference sites, but unsaturated and aromatised diterpenes released from resins by industrial pulping processes are readily accumulated by the clams (BSAFs >500). Thus while most of the smelter associated PAHs in sediments may not be bioavailable to benthic organisms, the plant terpenes (including retene, totarol, ferruginol, manool, dehydroabietane and other plant terpenes that form the chemical defence mechanism of conifers) released by pulp mills are bioavailable and possess demonstrated toxic properties. The large scale release of plant terpenes by some of the many pulp mills located in British Columbia and elsewhere represents a largely undocumented risk to aquatic biota.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21788067     DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2011.06.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mar Environ Res        ISSN: 0141-1136            Impact factor:   3.130


  2 in total

1.  Characterization and spatial distribution of organic-contaminated sediment derived from historical industrial effluents.

Authors:  Emma Hoffman; Masi Alimohammadi; James Lyons; Emily Davis; Tony R Walker; Craig B Lake
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2019-08-23       Impact factor: 2.513

2.  Contamination of Scots pine forests with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons on the territory of industrial city of Siberia, Russia.

Authors:  Olga Vladimirovna Kalugina; Tatiana Alekseevna Mikhailova; Olga Vladimirovna Shergina
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2018-05-17       Impact factor: 4.223

  2 in total

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