Increasing perfluoroalkyl contaminants in east Greenland polar bears (Ursus maritimus): A new toxic threat to the Arctic bears: Supplemental material

Dietz, R; Bossi, R; Rigét, FF; Sonne, C; Born, EW

HERO ID

10476123

Reference Type

Journal Article

Subtype

Supplemental Data

Year

2008

Language

English

HERO ID 10476123
Material Type Supplemental Data
In Press No
Year 2008
Title Increasing perfluoroalkyl contaminants in east Greenland polar bears (Ursus maritimus): A new toxic threat to the Arctic bears: Supplemental material
Authors Dietz, R; Bossi, R; Rigét, FF; Sonne, C; Born, EW
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 42
Issue 7
Abstract A well-defined subsample of 128 subadult (3-5 years) polar bears (Ursus maritimus) from 19 sampling years within the period 1984-2006 was investigated for perfluoroalkyl contaminants (PFCs), Linear regression analysis of logarithmic-transformed median concentrations showed significant annual increases for PFOS (4.7%), PFNA (6.1%), PFUnA (5.9%), PFDA (4.3%), PFTrA (8.5%), PFOA (2.3%), and PFDoA (5.2%). For four of the PFCs, a LOESS smoother model provided significantly better descriptions, revealing steeper linear annual increases for PFOSA of 9.2% after 1990 and between 18.6 and 27.4% for PFOS, PFDA, and PFTrA after 2000. Concentrations of Sigma PFCs, by 2006, exceeded the concentrations of all conventional OHCs (organohalogen compounds), of which several have been documented to correlate with a number of negative health effects. If the PFC concentrations in polar bears continue to increase with the steepest observed trends, then the lowest no-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) and lowest-adverse-effect level (LOAEL) detected for rats and monkeys will be exceeded in 2014-2024. In addition, the rapidly increasing concentrations of PFCs are likely to cause cumulative and combined effects on the polar bear, compounding the already detected threats from OHCs.
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Relationship(s)