posted on 2006-12-15, 00:00authored byLin Tao, Kurunthachalam Kannan, Natsuko Kajiwara, Mônica M. Costa, Gilberto Fillmann, Shin Takahashi, Shinsuke Tanabe
Perfluorinated chemicals (PFCs) have been used as
surfactants in industrial and commercial products for over
50 years. Earlier studies of the geographical distribution
of PFCs focused primarily on the Northern Hemisphere, while
little attention was paid to the Southern Hemisphere. In
this study, livers from eight species of albatrosses, blood
from elephant seal, and blood and eggs from penguins and
polar skua collected from the Southern Ocean and the
Antarctic during 1995−2005 were analyzed for 10 PFCs. In
addition, for comparison with the Southern Ocean
samples, we analyzed liver, sera, and eggs from two
species of albatrosses from Midway Atoll in the North
Pacific Ocean. Perfluorooctanesulfonate (PFOS) and
perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) were found in livers of
albatrosses from the Southern Ocean. PFOS was the major
contaminant, although the concentrations were <5 ng/g,
wet wt, in 92% of the albatross livers analyzed. PFOA was
detected in 30% of the albatross livers, with a concentration
range of <0.6−2.45 ng/g, wet wt. Other PFCs, including long-chain perfluorocarboxylates (PFCAs), were below the limits
of quantitation in livers of albatrosses from the Southern
Ocean. In liver, sera, and eggs of albatrosses from the North
Pacific Ocean, long-chain PFCAs (perfluorononanoate,
perfluorodecanoate, perfluoroundecanoate, and perfluorododecanoate) were found at concentrations similar to
those of PFOS and PFOA. The mean concentration of PFOS
in livers of Laysan albatrosses from the North Pacific
Ocean (5.1 ng/g, wet wt) was higher than that in several
species of albatrosses from the Southern Ocean (2.2 ng/g,
wet wt). Species-specific differences in the concentrations
of PFOS were noted among Southern Ocean albatrosses,
whereas geographical differences in PFOS concentrations
among the Indian Ocean, South Pacific Ocean, and
South Atlantic Ocean were insignificant. Concentrations
of PFOS and PFOA were, respectively, 2- and 17-fold higher
in liver than in sera of Laysan albatrosses. PFOS was
found in the blood of elephant seals from Antarctica at
concentrations ranging from <0.08 to 3.52 ng/mL. PFOS was
found in eggs (2.1−3.1 ng/g) and blood (<0.24−1.4 ng/mL) of polar skuas but was not detected in penguins from
Antarctica. Our study documents the existence of low
but detectable levels of PFOS and PFOA in Southern
Hemisphere fauna, suggesting distribution of these compounds
on a global scale.