| Literature DB >> 29799069 |
A Pouch1, A Zaborska2, K Pazdro2.
Abstract
In the present study, we investigated the spatial and historical trends of hexachlorobenzene (HCB) contamination in dated sediments of three Svalbard fjords (Kongsfjorden, Hornsund, Adventfjorden) differing in environmental conditions and human impact. HCB concentrations ranging from below limit of quantification (6.86 pg/g d.w.) to 143.99 pg/g d.w. were measured. The highest concentrations were measured in two surface sediment layers of the core collected in Hornsund near the melting glacier. The lowest concentrations of HCB were measured in Adventfjorden, suggesting that local source of HCB is not significant and global transport processes are the major transport pathways. The history of HCB deposition did not fully reflect the history of HCB emission (largest in 1950s and 1960s). In case of several sediment cores, the HCB enrichment in surface (recent) sediments was noticed. This can indicate importance of secondary sources of HCB, e.g., the influx of HCB accumulated over decades on the surface of glaciers. Detected levels of HCB were generally low and did not exceed background concentration levels; thus, a negative effect on benthic organisms is not expected.Entities:
Keywords: Hexachlorobenzene; Persistent organic pollutants; Sediment; Svalbard fjords
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29799069 PMCID: PMC5968051 DOI: 10.1007/s10661-018-6722-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Monit Assess ISSN: 0167-6369 Impact factor: 2.513
Fig. 1Location of sampling stations in Kongsfjorden (K1–K4), Hornsund (H1–H5) and Adventfjorden (AD)
Description of sampling stations in three Svalbard fjords (Kongsfjorden, Hornsund, and Adventfjorden), including coordinates, water depth, sediment accumulation rates (Zaborska et al. 2017), organic matter content (Morg content), and fine fraction (Pouch et al. 2017)
| Station | Coordinates | Sampling year | Water depth (m) | Sediment accumulation rates (mm/year) | Fine fraction (< 63 μm) (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| K1 | 79° 00′ 03″ N | 2014 | 330 | 0.22 | 9.9–11.8 | 88.6–97.4 |
| K2 | 78° 57′ 58″ N | 2014 | 296 | 0.28 | 7.9–10.4 | 91.9–96.6 |
| K3 | 78° 55′ 03″ N | 2013 | 96 | 0.47 | 5.3–9.1 | 93.2–97.5 |
| K4 | 78° 53′ 02″ N | 2013 | 84 | – | 5.2–7.8 | 97.5–99.5 |
| AD | 78° 15′ 58″ N | 2013 | 102 | 0.27 | 6.0–7.2 | 81.6–93.9 |
| H1 | 76° 58′ 57″ N | 2007 | 102 | 0.18 | 4.5–7.6 | 91.2–96.6 |
| H2 | 77° 00′ 00″ N | 2007 | 178 | 0.36 | 8.2–11.0 | 94.8–98.7 |
| H3 | 76° 55′ 59″ N | 2007 | 136 | 0.18 | 5.8–7.8 | 95.0–96.5 |
| H4 | 76° 58′ 07″ N | 2007 | 206 | 0.40 | 4.4–9.5 | 83.8–97.4 |
| H5 | 77° 00′ 20″ N | 2013 | 130 | 0.69 | 3.2–8.9 | 93.1–93.0 |
Conditions of the chromatographic analysis
| Detector | Injector temperature | Detector temperature | Column | Carrier gas | Oven temperature programmer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electron capture detector | 280 °C | 320 °C | DB-5 60 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 μm | Helium, flow 1.5 ml He/min | 100 °C held for 1 min; 6 °C/min to 140 °C; 2.5 °C/min to 250 °C; 10 °C/min to 310 °C, held for 20 min |
Fig. 2The HCB concentrations [pg/g d.w] measured in dated sediment cores collected from Kongsfjorden, Hornsund and Adventfjorden
HCB concentrations in sediments from different Arctic regions. Compound concentrations below the quantification limit are marked “b.d.”
| Location | HCB concentration [pg/g d.w.] | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adventfjorden | b.d.–8.0 | This study | |
| Hornsund | 6.8–140 | ||
| Kongsfjorden | b.d.–50 | ||
| 120–400 | Akvaplan-niva ( | ||
| b.d.–10 | Szczybelski et al. ( | ||
| North Norway fjords | 50–6700 | Dahle et al. ( | |
| North Russian fjords | Kola Bay | 100–1500 | |
| 90–1,350,000 | Savinova et al. ( | ||
| Guba Zapadnaya Litsa | 150–2800 | ||
| Guba Penchenga | 280–1800 | Dahle et al. ( | |
| 280–1760 | Savinov et al. ( | ||
| Barents Sea | b.d.–370 | Szczybelski et al. ( | |
| b.d.–2010 | Zaborska et al. ( | ||
| Bering Sea | 100 | Strachan et al. ( | |
| b.d.–2.7 | Ma et al. ( | ||
| Bering Strait | 5.4–97.2 | ||
| Norwegian Sea | 5.5–10.0 | ||
| Arctic Ocean | Amundsen Basin | 11.6 | |
| Canada Basin | b.d.–6.8 | ||
| Chukchi Sea | 13.6–78.2 | ||
| 130 | Strachan et al. ( | ||
| 35 | Iwata et al. ( | ||
| 490 | RAIPON/AMAP/GEF Project ( | ||
The R coefficients and p values for the Spearman correlation between HCB concentrations and Morg content and fine fraction content in sediments from three Svalbard fjords
| Fjord | Fine fraction (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| HCB pg/g (Kongsfjorden) | − 0.05 ( | − 0.05 ( |
| HCB pg/g (Hornsund) | − 0.10 ( | − 0.20 ( |
| HCB pg/g (Adventfjorden) | 0.71 ( | 0.56 ( |
| HCB pg/g (all samples) | − 0.09 ( | 0.04 ( |
Fig. 3HCB deposition rates [ng/m2/yr] calculated for Kongsfjorden, Adventfjorden, and Hornsund (this study) in comparison to atmospheric HCB fluxes estimated for Lomonosovfonna (Svalbard) by Matthews et al. (2001)
Fig. 4Emissions of HCB [tonnes] from Europe, according to data published by Barber et al. (2005) and Shatalov et al. (2001). Since 1970, HCB production has been restricted in most countries
Fig. 5Comparison of sedimentary HCB concentrations [pg/g d.w.] at three stations in Kongsfjorden and airborne HCB concentration [pg/m3] measured in Ny-Ålesund, Kongsfjorden (NILU, 2016)
Time of sediment layer deposition, peak and surface sediment concentration of HCB, and calculated HCB environmental half-life in the investigated sediment cores
| Station | Deposition time | Peak conc. [pg/g d.w.] | Surface conc. [pg/g d.w.] | Half-life [years] |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| K1 | 1968–1978 | 34.99 | 7.57 | 17 |
| K2 | 1940–1950 | 50.01 | 8.15 | 26 |
| H1 | 1958–1972 | 53.55 | 23.17 | 31 |