Preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using Antarctic marine mammals

Eight PBDE congeners, three emerging brominated flame retardants, five dechloranes and eight MeO-PBDEs were monitored in tissues (muscular, adipose, brain) and fur of southern elephant seal and Antarctic fur seal of the South Shetland Islands, Antarctic Peninsula. Total PBDEs and total dechloranes concentrations ranged between n.d.–6 ng/g lw. While PBDEs were not detected in brain tissue, Dec 602 was found in brain tissue of both seal species indicating that dechloranes —with potential neurological toxicity— could cross the blood-brain barrier. Emerging brominated flame retardants were not detected in any sample and only two MeO-PBDEs, which are of natural origin, were found. The presence of the detected compounds in biota from the Antarctic evidences their long-range transportation, being of special interest the detection of emerging compounds such as dechloranes. This is the first time that these contaminants have been detected in marine mammals from the Antarctic. BDE-47 concentrations were lower than previously reported for the same species, suggesting a successful effect of the existing regulation and bans on PBDEs. Capsule abstract: Halogenated flame retardants were in tissues of Antarctic seals proving long-range transport. Dechloranes showed similar behaviour to PBDEs, additionally they crossed the BBB. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aznar-Alemany, Òscar, Yang, Xuefei, Alonso, Mariana B., Costa, Erli Schneider, Torres, João Paulo M., Malm, Olaf, Barceló, Damià, Eljarrat, Ethel
Other Authors: Barceló, Damià [0000-0002-8873-0491]
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-02-10
Subjects:Antarctic seals, Blood-brain barrier, Fur samples, Emerging flame retardants, Halogenated norbornenes,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/203126
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spelling dig-idaea-es-10261-2031262021-02-10T05:30:33Z Preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using Antarctic marine mammals Aznar-Alemany, Òscar Yang, Xuefei Alonso, Mariana B. Costa, Erli Schneider Torres, João Paulo M. Malm, Olaf Barceló, Damià Eljarrat, Ethel Barceló, Damià [0000-0002-8873-0491] Eljarrat, Ethel [0000-0002-0814-6579] Antarctic seals Blood-brain barrier Fur samples Emerging flame retardants Halogenated norbornenes Eight PBDE congeners, three emerging brominated flame retardants, five dechloranes and eight MeO-PBDEs were monitored in tissues (muscular, adipose, brain) and fur of southern elephant seal and Antarctic fur seal of the South Shetland Islands, Antarctic Peninsula. Total PBDEs and total dechloranes concentrations ranged between n.d.–6 ng/g lw. While PBDEs were not detected in brain tissue, Dec 602 was found in brain tissue of both seal species indicating that dechloranes —with potential neurological toxicity— could cross the blood-brain barrier. Emerging brominated flame retardants were not detected in any sample and only two MeO-PBDEs, which are of natural origin, were found. The presence of the detected compounds in biota from the Antarctic evidences their long-range transportation, being of special interest the detection of emerging compounds such as dechloranes. This is the first time that these contaminants have been detected in marine mammals from the Antarctic. BDE-47 concentrations were lower than previously reported for the same species, suggesting a successful effect of the existing regulation and bans on PBDEs. Capsule abstract: Halogenated flame retardants were in tissues of Antarctic seals proving long-range transport. Dechloranes showed similar behaviour to PBDEs, additionally they crossed the BBB. © 2018 Elsevier B.V. This work has been financially supported by the Generalitat de Catalunya (Consolidated Research Group 2017 SGR 01404 – Water and Soil Quality Unit). Biotage is acknowledged for providing SPE cartridges. The samples were collected with support of the Brazilian Antarctic Program (PROANTAR). The authors would like to thank the logistic support by Brazilian Navy and Aeronautics Forces. Project CNPq number (ESC). MBA has sandwich doctorate fellowship by CNPq – PDEE. Peer reviewed 2020-03-09T07:14:32Z 2020-03-09T07:14:32Z 2019-02-10 artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 Science of the Total Environment 650: 1889-1897 (2019) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/203126 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.09.287 en Postprint https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.09.287 Sí open Elsevier
institution IDAEA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-idaea-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del IDAEA España
language English
topic Antarctic seals
Blood-brain barrier
Fur samples
Emerging flame retardants
Halogenated norbornenes
Antarctic seals
Blood-brain barrier
Fur samples
Emerging flame retardants
Halogenated norbornenes
spellingShingle Antarctic seals
Blood-brain barrier
Fur samples
Emerging flame retardants
Halogenated norbornenes
Antarctic seals
Blood-brain barrier
Fur samples
Emerging flame retardants
Halogenated norbornenes
Aznar-Alemany, Òscar
Yang, Xuefei
Alonso, Mariana B.
Costa, Erli Schneider
Torres, João Paulo M.
Malm, Olaf
Barceló, Damià
Eljarrat, Ethel
Preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using Antarctic marine mammals
description Eight PBDE congeners, three emerging brominated flame retardants, five dechloranes and eight MeO-PBDEs were monitored in tissues (muscular, adipose, brain) and fur of southern elephant seal and Antarctic fur seal of the South Shetland Islands, Antarctic Peninsula. Total PBDEs and total dechloranes concentrations ranged between n.d.–6 ng/g lw. While PBDEs were not detected in brain tissue, Dec 602 was found in brain tissue of both seal species indicating that dechloranes —with potential neurological toxicity— could cross the blood-brain barrier. Emerging brominated flame retardants were not detected in any sample and only two MeO-PBDEs, which are of natural origin, were found. The presence of the detected compounds in biota from the Antarctic evidences their long-range transportation, being of special interest the detection of emerging compounds such as dechloranes. This is the first time that these contaminants have been detected in marine mammals from the Antarctic. BDE-47 concentrations were lower than previously reported for the same species, suggesting a successful effect of the existing regulation and bans on PBDEs. Capsule abstract: Halogenated flame retardants were in tissues of Antarctic seals proving long-range transport. Dechloranes showed similar behaviour to PBDEs, additionally they crossed the BBB. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.
author2 Barceló, Damià [0000-0002-8873-0491]
author_facet Barceló, Damià [0000-0002-8873-0491]
Aznar-Alemany, Òscar
Yang, Xuefei
Alonso, Mariana B.
Costa, Erli Schneider
Torres, João Paulo M.
Malm, Olaf
Barceló, Damià
Eljarrat, Ethel
format artículo
topic_facet Antarctic seals
Blood-brain barrier
Fur samples
Emerging flame retardants
Halogenated norbornenes
author Aznar-Alemany, Òscar
Yang, Xuefei
Alonso, Mariana B.
Costa, Erli Schneider
Torres, João Paulo M.
Malm, Olaf
Barceló, Damià
Eljarrat, Ethel
author_sort Aznar-Alemany, Òscar
title Preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using Antarctic marine mammals
title_short Preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using Antarctic marine mammals
title_full Preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using Antarctic marine mammals
title_fullStr Preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using Antarctic marine mammals
title_full_unstemmed Preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using Antarctic marine mammals
title_sort preliminary study of long-range transport of halogenated flame retardants using antarctic marine mammals
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2019-02-10
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/203126
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