posted on 2014-06-17, 00:00authored byAnna Sobek, Örjan Gustafsson
There
is a wealth of studies of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB)
in surface water and biota of the Arctic Ocean. Still, there are no
observation-based assessments of PCB distribution and inventories
in and between the major Arctic Ocean compartments. Here, the first
water column distribution of PCBs in the central Arctic Ocean basins
(Nansen, Amundsen, and Makarov) is presented, demonstrating nutrient-like
vertical profiles with 5–10 times higher concentrations in
the intermediate and deep water masses than in surface waters. The
consistent vertical profiles in all three Arctic Ocean basins likely
reflect buildup of PCBs transported from the shelf seas and from dissolution
and/or mineralization of settling particles. Combined with measurement
data on PCBs in other Arctic Ocean compartments collected over the
past decade, the total Arctic Ocean inventory of ∑7PCB was estimated to 182 ± 40 t (±1 standard error of the
mean), with sediments (144 ± 40 t), intermediate (5 ± 1
t) and deep water masses (30 ± 2 t) storing 98% of the PCBs in
the Arctic Ocean. Further, we used hydrographic and carbon cycle parametrizations
to assess the main pathways of PCBs into and out of the Arctic Ocean
during the 20th century. River discharge appeared to be the major
pathway for PCBs into the Arctic Ocean with 115 ± 11 t, followed
by ocean currents (52 ± 17 t) and net atmospheric deposition
(30 ± 28 t). Ocean currents provided the only important pathway
out of the Arctic Ocean, with an estimated cumulative flux of 22 ±
10 t. The observation-based inventory of ∑7PCB of
182 ± 40 t is consistent with the contemporary inventory based
on cumulative fluxes for ∑7PCB of 173 ± 36
t. Information on the concentration and distribution of PCBs in the
deeper compartments of the Arctic Ocean improves our understanding
of the large-scale fate of POPs in the Arctic and may also provide
a means to test and improve models used to assess the fate of organic
pollutants in the Arctic.