Emerging POPs-type cocktail signatures in Pusa caspica in quantitative structure-activity relationship of Caspian Sea

Ranjbar Jafarabadi, A; Mashjoor, S; Mohamadjafari Dehkordi, S; Riyahi Bakhtiari, A; Cappello, T

HERO ID

7000169

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2020

Language

English

PMID

33162245

HERO ID 7000169
In Press No
Year 2020
Title Emerging POPs-type cocktail signatures in Pusa caspica in quantitative structure-activity relationship of Caspian Sea
Authors Ranjbar Jafarabadi, A; Mashjoor, S; Mohamadjafari Dehkordi, S; Riyahi Bakhtiari, A; Cappello, T
Journal Journal of Hazardous Materials
Volume 406
Page Numbers 124334
Abstract The Caspian seal Pusa caspica is the only endemic mammalian species throughout the Caspian Sea. This is the first report on risk assessment of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in Caspian seals by age-sex and tissue-specific uptake, and their surrounding environment (seawater, surface sediments, and suspended particulate matters, SPMs) in the Gorgan Bay (Caspian Sea, Iran). Among the quantified 70 POPs (∑35PCBs, ∑3HCHs, ∑6CHLs, ∑6DDTs, ∑17PCDD/Fs, HCB, dieldrin, and aldrin), ∑35PCBs were dominant in abiotic matrices (48.80% of ∑70POPs), followed by HCHs > CHLs > DDTs > PCDD/Fs > other POPs in surface sediments > SPMs > seawater, while the toxic equivalent quantity (TEQWHO) exceeded the safe value (possible risk in this area). In biota, the highest levels of ∑70POPs were found in males (756.3 ng g-1 dw, p < 0.05), followed by females (419.0 ng g-1 dw) and pups (191.6 ng g-1 dw) in liver > kidney > muscle > blubber > intestine > fur > heart > spleen > brain. The positive age-related POPs declining correlation between mother-pup pairs suggested the possible maternal transfer of POPs to offspring. The cocktail toxicity assessment revealed that Caspian seals can pose a low risk based on their mixed-TEQ values. Self-organizing map (SOM) indicated the non-coplanar PCB-93 as the most over-represented functional congener in tissue-specific POPs bioaccumulation. Quantitative toxicant tissue-profiling is valuable for predicting the state of mixture toxicity in pinniped species.
Doi 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.124334
Pmid 33162245
Wosid WOS:000662119400030
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English