Abstract
Anyone interested in the history of environmental chemistry, and in particular the management and remediation of pollution, soon encounters the term POP along with the Stockholm Convention and the dirty dozen.
You have full access to this open access chapter, Download chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
8.1 Introduction
Anyone interested in the history of environmental chemistry, and in particular the management and remediation of pollution, soon encounters the term POP along with the Stockholm Convention and the dirty dozen. This chapter gives an overview of this topic. It provides an important expansion of Chapter 7 on pesticides and biocides further addressing those pesticides that are also classified as POPs along with POPs that are derived from other sources.
The acronym POP is used for each member of a group of compounds called Persistent Organic Pollutants. The Stockholm Convention is an international agreement endorsed by most nations with the intent of managing (limiting the generation and usage, and where possible eliminating) further environmental contamination by this problematic group of chemicals. Some countries have not yet ratified (officially adopted) the terms of the Convention, (for example, the United States of America (USA)), or only partly ratified. The term the dirty dozen (a common descriptor for a group comprising 12 individuals of ill-repute) was used for the original 12 POPs listed in the Stockholm Convention in 2001.
The POPs are of concern because not only are they toxic contaminants but they also have a strong potential to bioaccumulate and persist (Box 8.1). This aspect of their environmental fate and impact is related to their physicochemical properties.
8.2 History of POPs
As highlighted in Chapter 7, the problems of bioaccumulation and toxic effects associated with pesticides that are POPs became widely recognised with the publication of Silent Spring (Carson, 1962), which publicised the unintended environmental consequences associated with the use of organochlorine insecticides including DDT(Figure 8.1), lindane (also known as BHC), heptachlor, and chlordane introduced during the 1940s and in widespread use by the 1950s. Silent Spring and the media publicity and public debate sent a strong message to the community, and to governments and chemical regulators on a global scale (note: this happened before the internet or real-time social media communication was even conceived!).
Although the environmental impacts associated with POPs are now recognised by scientists and governments, the claims made in Silent Spring were hotly debated for many years following publication (ACS 2012). For example, in Australia in 1972 (a decade after the book was published), an enquiry established by the Australian Parliament was still reviewing and debating whether ongoing DDT use was problematic for wildlife and human health (Parliament of Australia, 1972). In 1972, the use of DDT in Australia and New Zealand was estimated as 900 tonnes per year (AAS 1972) despite restrictions introduced during the 1960s.
8.3 The Stockholm Convention
The focused attention by government agencies at an international scale on the environmental issues associated with POPs led to the establishment in 2001 of a global treaty among nations, formally known as the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants. The convention, with the objective to “protect human health and the environment from organic pollutants” came into force in 2004 and was ratified by 152 UN member states. By mid-2018, the number of ratifying states (including the European Union) had increased to 182 (Figure 8.2).
The history, scope, amendments, and signatories can be found online at the United Nations Treaties website:
https://treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src=TREATY&mtdsg_no=XXVII-15&chapter=27&clang=_en
Full details of all aspects of the convention are available at the website of the Secretariat of the Stockholm Convention:
http://www.pops.int/TheConvention/ThePOPs/tabid/673/Default.aspx
8.3.1 Overview of the Convention
The initial version of the convention covered 12 POP compounds known as the dirty dozen. The signatories to the original version of the convention agreed to:
-
outlaw nine intentionally-manufactured POP chemicals;
-
limit the use of DDT for malaria control; and
-
reduce inadvertent production of dioxins and furans.
The convention committed developed countries to provide financial resources and measures to eliminate production and use of intentionally-produced POPs, eliminate unintentionally produced POPs where feasible, and manage and dispose of POP waste in an environmentally sound manner.
The convention includes an agreement to follow procedures to identify additional POPs and outlines the criteria applied in doing so. Under the convention, reviews of chemicals as potential new POPs are led by a Persistent Organic Pollutants Review Committee (POPRC) comprising government-designated experts in chemical assessment and/or management. The members are nominated by and represent the signatory nations on a regional basis. The review process accounts for persistence, bioaccumulation, potential for long-range environmental transport, and toxicity of potential new POPs.
A series of review reports on individual POPs, published by the POPRC are available online, for example, UNEP (2015) in respect of the brominated flame retardant c-Decabromodiphenyl ether (c-decaBDE).
8.3.2 Annexes and Exemptions for Some POPs
Under the Stockholm Convention, each of the POPs is assigned an agreed Annex status. These are A—elimination, B—restriction, and C—unintended production:
-
Annex A POPs (elimination) are prohibited from production and use (except for specific usage exemptions allowed only for convention parties that register for the exemption) and may be imported or exported only under specific restrictive conditions.
-
Annex B POPs (restriction) are restricted from production and use (except for registered acceptable purposes) and imported and exported only under specific restrictive conditions. An example is that DDT use is still permitted for disease vector control for serious diseases such as malaria.
-
Annex C POPs (unintentionally produced) are subject to release reduction and elimination, and the use of the best available techniques and best environmental practices for preventing releases of POPs into the environment are promoted.
Exemptions for some POPs and their uses are allowed in cases where replacement technologies do not yet exist, or viable replacement technologies are not readily available. This enables signatories to the Convention to take measures to reduce or eliminate releases from intentional production and use. Exemptions are limited to a specific time period.
In addition, the convention requires that signatory nations ensure stockpiles and wastes consisting of, containing, or contaminated with POPs, are managed safely and in an environmentally sound manner. This requires that such stockpiles and wastes be identified and managed to reduce or eliminate POPs releases from these sources, and that transport of wastes containing POPs across international boundaries is done according to international rules, standards and guidelines.
8.3.3 The Original Set of 12 POPs Covered by the Stockholm Convention
The original dirty dozen POPs are listed in Table 8.1 with their structures and historical main uses, along with some general characteristics and toxicity. It is useful to note that:
-
all are chlorinated hydrocarbons (also known as organohalogens) and nine are pesticides;
-
all are chemically stable and highly lipophilic compounds that do not degrade readily even under extreme environmental conditions; and
-
some partially degrade into compounds of similar stability and toxicity.
Furthermore, all have an established history of environmental persistence, bioaccumulation, and capacity for global distribution, and their use and release are associated with unintended adverse environmental consequences.
8.3.4 Additional POPs Now Covered by the Stockholm Convention
Since 2009, a further 16 compounds have been added to the listed Stockholm Convention POPs. In addition to several additional chlorinated hydrocarbons, the additions to the POPs list include several polybrominated hydrocarbons widely used as fire-retardants. The most recent new POP was added in 2015.
These new POPs are shown in Table 8.2 with their structures, uses, and general features of characteristics and toxicity. Like the original dirty dozen POPs, many of the additional POPs are chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides, but also included are non-pesticide chlorinated hydrocarbons, several brominated fire-retardant compounds, and a per-fluorinated compound (known generally as a PFOS). Like the original POPs, these chemicals also have a demonstrated capacity for environmental persistence, for bioaccumulation, and for global distribution and most have been detected in the marine environment and various marine species. Studies of toxicity to marine species are limited for some POPs and consideration needs to be made about potential sources and risk to the marine environment. Atmospheric transport is an important pathway to the marine environment for some POPs. Their use and release are associated with unintended adverse environmental consequences.
The addition of new POPs to the convention is a dynamic process, with an established protocol for expert review of changes (see Section 8.3.1). Very recently, in June 2022, the Conference of the Parties to the Stockholm Convention amended Annex A to list “perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS), its salts and PFHxS-related compounds in Annex A without specific exemptions (decision SC-10/13)”. For specific details see http://www.pops.int/TheConvention/ThePOPs/TheNewPOPs/tabid/2511/Default.aspx. The pesticide Methoxychlor, the flame retardant Declorane Plus, and a plastic stabiliser UV-238 are being reviewed for listing as POPs.
8.4 Naming Conventions for Individual PCCD, PCDF, and PCB Compounds
The naming of the individual structural congeners is based on the number and positions of the chlorine atoms (Box 8.3). The general formulae for PCCD (dioxins), PCDF (furans) and PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls), along with two example structures are illustrated at Figure 8.5. For PCCD and PCDF, the numbers 1–9 indicate the possible positions of the chlorine atoms. For PCB, the numbers 2–6 (2′–6′) indicate the possible positions of the chlorine atoms at ortho(o), meta(m), and para(p) positions, respectively.
8.5 Assessment of Toxicity and Quantifying Exposure Risks for POPS
The toxicity of POPs can be expressed in standard terms such as LC50, EC50, etc. (see Chapter 3). However, POPs are commonly present in an environmental sample as a mixture of related compounds (see Chapter 14), for which the individual concentrations are measured and reported. Such mixtures may comprise both the parent compound and its breakdown products and metabolites—each with their own specific toxicities (e.g. DDT is commonly found with its breakdown products DDE and DDD). Some POPs are found and measured in the environment in one or more isometric forms (for example, hexachlorocyclohexane—HCH). Other examples are heptachlor (mostly found as heptachlor epoxide), and endosulfan (both parent isomers and endosulfan sulphate).
Where toxicities of parent material and breakdown product are similar, the concentrations present are often listed and assessed as totals (e.g. total DDTs). However, for some POPS such as PCDDs, PCDFs, and PCBs assessments of toxicity and exposure risks are more complex, as these POPS typically occur in the environment as mixtures of congeners with a wide range of potential toxicities.
8.5.1 Assessment of Toxicity and Exposure Risks for Dioxins, Furans, and Dioxin-Like PCBs
Dioxins, and furans have similar chemical structures, properties, and toxicities. By convention, when discussing toxicity and exposure risks, the term dioxins or total dioxins is generally taken to include PCDDs, PCDFs and dioxin-like PCBs. The dioxin-like PCBs are those PCB compounds exhibiting similar toxicity to dioxins, with toxic responses expressed including dermal toxicity, immunotoxicity, reproductive deficits, teratogenicity, endocrine toxicity and carcinogenicity/tumour promotion similar to those observed for 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD).
8.5.2 The Meaning and Use of the Terms TEF and TEQ
In the environment, PCDDs, PCDFs, and dioxin-like PCBs are usually present in complex mixtures. For example, with PCBs, the proportion of congeners present in environmental samples is often related to the composition of the commercial formulation that is the source of contamination (e.g. Aroclor).
The World Health Organization (WHO) identifies 29 closely-related PCDD, PCDF, and dioxin-like PCB congeners as having a common mechanism of toxicity to PCBs. However, since their toxicities differ, WHO has adopted a toxic equivalent factor (TEF) for each of the 29 congeners to calculate a human risk assessment for individual components of the chemical mixture. TEFs are weighting factors assigned to specific congeners to reflect their toxicity relative to that of the most toxic dioxin, TCDD with TEF = 1.
The WHO-adopted TEFs are listed in Table 8.3. The original set of TEFs was adopted in 1998, but new TEF values were adopted following a review in 2005. The rationale and methods used in the TEF review process are reported in Van den Berg et al. (2006).
The toxicity of a mixture of PCDDs, PCDFs, and dioxin-like PCBs is quantified as its Total TEQ. To calculate Total TEQ, the concentration of each congener present is multiplied by that congener’s TEF to determine a weighted concentration or toxic equivalent (TEQ), and the total toxicity of the mixture is the sum of the individual congener TEQs as shown in Eq. 8.1.
where:
i = a unique number assigned to each individual chemical applied iteratively starting at 1 and proceeding sequentially.
n = the total number of unique pollutants.
Such results are expressed in concentration units such as picogram TEQ per gram.
It is important when comparing contamination assessments between sites, and/or for assessing historical changes in POP concentrations and distribution, that TEQ assessment dates are checked to ensure that all TEQs and conclusions are based on the current (2005) WHO-TEQs, and to recalculate any Total TEQs that are based on out-of-date TEQs (e.g. assessments dated earlier than 2005).
8.5.3 Use of Homologues and Congener Profiles in Forensic Investigations
Knowledge of the contaminant constituents in a sample containing a mixture of dioxins, furans, PCBs and/or PBBs, and PBDEs can be useful in developing a characteristic profile of contaminants present. For example, patterns of similarity in the presence and relative concentrations of members of a homologue set can be used to describe similarities and differences in contamination patterns between sites or across environmental media (e.g. EPHC 2005).
Frequently, similarities in homologue and congener profiles can be used as a fingerprint to make associations between PCDD/PCDF/PCB and/or PBB and PBDE contamination at a site and historical activities associated with the site. Similarly, PCDD/PCDF/PCB and/or PBB and PBDE profiles in samples from exposed persons/fish/livestock/food can be compared with profiles in samples taken from potential sources of the contamination. However, congener composition in a mixture released to the environment can change over time, making fingerprinting a complex task (Saba and Boehm, 2011).
Air, sediment, biota, and water samples are the most likely to have had their congener composition changed by environmental conditions. For example, composition changes can occur because PCDD/PCDF/PCB congeners with fewer chlorine atoms tend to partition into air and water more readily than those with more chlorine atoms. The relative partitioning potentials can be assessed from the partition coefficients of the individual compounds. For this reason, air and water samples are likely to be enriched with congeners with fewer chlorine atoms. In addition, the concentrations of individual congeners present in biota samples can also be altered through bio-degradation, with some congeners being selectively reduced and others remaining constant. Similar biodegradation involving debromination can occur with brominated contaminants, in fact more readily since the carbon-bromine bond is weaker than the carbon-chlorine bond.
8.6 Case Studies
8.6.1 Case Study 1—Dioxins, Furans, and Dioxin-Like PCBs in the Australian Aquatic Environment.
A comprehensive overview of dioxins, furans, and dioxin-like PCBs in Australia is provided in the series of studies comprising the National Dioxin Program (NDP) (EPHC 2005). The distributions of these POPs in the Australian aquatic environment are covered in Technical Report No. 6 (Müller et al. 2004). This study of Australian aquatic sediments showed that dioxins, furans, and dioxin-like PCBs were found in all samples, with middle-bound concentrations ranging from 0.002 to 520 pg TEQ g/dm (calculated using 1998 WHO-TEFs).
Aquatic sediments from urban/industrial sampling locations had significantly greater concentrations of dioxin-like chemicals than samples from remote and agricultural locations. The greatest concentrations occurred in sediments from the Parramatta River estuary (100 and 520 pg TEQ g/dm, Figure 8.6).
This pattern of POP distribution was similar in the case of bivalves and fish (Figures 8.7 and 8.8). However, concentrations in the aquatic environment (sediments, bivalves and fish) were in most cases less than published levels for other industrialised countries.
Homologue and congener profiles for PCDD/PCDF were strongly dominated by OCDD, with the 1,2,3,4,6,7,8-heptachloro dibenzodioxin usually the congener with the second-highest concentration (Figure 8.9).
8.6.2 Case Study 2—Spatial and Temporal Trends in Concentrations of Brominated Fire-Retardant POPs in Arctic Marine Mammal Tissues
Why are Arctic Marine Mammals at a High Risk of Bioaccumulating POPs?
Long-term global transport pathways for POPs result in the seas and oceans being the ultimate sink for most of the POPs released to the environment. In particular, the major processes for global transport of POPs tend to accumulate them in the colder waters of the polar regions—for example, the Arctic is well recognised as a sink for many POPs due to their repeated deposition and remobilisation (Breivik et al. 2007; Burkow and Kallenborn, 2000) (see also Chapter 7, Section 7.6.2). As a consequence, marine animal life is exposed to the hazard of bioaccumulating POPs, and particularly marine mammals (seals, walruses, sea otters, polar bears, and whales) since they are relatively long-lived, air-breathing animals and are relatively high in the marine food chain—especially polar bears.
The major route of uptake of lipophilic POPs by air-breathing aquatic animals is through diet. This is in contrast to the importance of lipophilic POP uptake from the water column through gill membranes in aquatic animals such as fish and aquatic invertebrates.
Potential routes of excretion of accumulated lipophilic POPs in air-breathing aquatic animals are also different from the routes of excretion for lipophilic POPs available to marine fish and crustaceans. In marine fish and crustaceans, the membranes of gills or equivalent organs, provide an important route for excretion of lipophilic POP contaminants to the surrounding water. The availability of this important excretion route in marine fish and crustaceans tends to limit the accumulation of persistent lipophilic compounds to an equilibrium concentration in the tissue lipids that is mediated by the partition coefficients for the POPs between blood lipid and water. However, air-breathing aquatic animals lack this excretion pathway for lipophilic contaminants to the surrounding water. Instead of excreting lipophilic compounds across gill membranes to the surrounding water, air-breathing mammals are able to excrete such contaminants to air subsequently exhaled from the lungs. However, partitioning of lipophilic POPs from the blood plasma lipids across lung membranes to air subsequently exhaled from the lungs is much less efficient due to the orders of magnitude differences between typical POPs partition coefficients between lipid and water (Kow) versus lipid and air (Koa). The octanol-water coefficient (Kow) is a recognised surrogate for the partition coefficient between biotic lipid and water (Gobas and Mackay 1987) (see also Section 7.5.3, Chapter 7). Since Kow values for POPs typically range from 104 to 107, but Koa values range from 106 to 1012 (Wania and Mackay 1999), it is likely that rates for POPs partitioning from blood lipid into air via lungs in air-breathing are 1 to 3 magnitudes lower than for partitioning from blood lipid to water via gills. This leads to the expectation that because marine mammals are air-breathers, dietary acquired lipophilic POPs will inexorably accumulate in their tissue lipids.
Confounding Factors Involved When Assessing Spatial and Temporal Trends in POP Concentrations in Arctic Marine Mammals
Although many studies have measured POPs concentrations in Arctic marine mammals, valid spatial or temporal comparisons are challenged by several confounding factors—for example that historical measurement data may not specify proximity of sampled animals to human populations and also biological factors such as species, age, health, and sex. In addition, sampling and analytical methodology for many organic contaminants was not standardised, making the results not easily comparable between studies (Green and Larson 2016).
For all mammals, transfer of lipophilic contaminants from mother to offspring is likely during lactation, resulting in increased body burden of contaminant in offspring and reduced burden in lactating females, thus sampling may show a pattern of greater contaminant concentrations in males than in females. However, this may be confounded in sampling data by other factors such as differences in diet and body condition at the time of sampling, for example, in polar bears (Lippold et al. 2019; Tartu et al. 2017). In respect to the influence of diet, it is suggested (Letcher et al. 2009) that changes in contaminant body burden of POPs can occur in polar bears in western Hudson Bay as a consequence of the dietary shifts by these animals over the past several decades (Bentzen et al. 2007; Thiemann et al. 2008) from ice-associated to open-water-associated prey species when these animals responded to changes in sea ice cover. Regarding body condition, concentrations of lipophilic compounds in plasma and fat were 4‒9 times higher in the thinnest compared to the fattest polar bears, whereas they were only 1.5‒1.8 times higher in the individuals feeding at highest versus lowest trophic levels (Tartu et al. 2017). This means that in general, tissue concentrations of lipophilic POPs are highest when polar bears are at their thinnest from approximately November to April–May, depending on local sea ice conditions and food availability.
An additional factor affecting concentrations of brominated fire-retardant POPs in polar bears is their demonstrated capability to biotransform these compounds (McKinney et al. 2011; Krieger et al. 2015; Vetter et al. 2015).
Temporal Trends for Brominated Fire-retardant POPs in Polar Bears.
Temporal trends for body burden of brominated fire retardants have been studied in polar bear subpopulations in the Barents Sea, East Greenland and Hudson Bay.
In the Barents Sea, tetraBDE concentrations decreased by 3% per year in female polar bears from 1997 to 2017 (Lippold et al. 2019). However the same study showed that hexaBDE concentrations were stable.
A study of subadult polar bears in East Greenland (Dietz et al. 2013) showed that between 1983 and 2010 both tetraBDE and 2 congeners of pentaBDE body burdens increased by 6‒8% per year until 2000‒2004, after which tetraBDE declined by 31% per year, along with a non-significant decline in pentaBDE concentrations. In addition, this study showed that both hexaBDE and HBCDD concentrations increased by 3% per year from 1983 to 2010, although hexabromobiphenyl (HBB) body burdens did not change.
In Western Hudson Bay polar bears, there are reported (McKinney et al. 2011) increases in ΣPBDE (mostly tetra-, penta- and hexaBDE) of 13% per year from 1991 to 2007, but with HBCDD only detected since 2000, and no change in hexabromobiphenyl (HBB) concentrations, which is similar to the results in the East Greenland study (Dietz et al. 2013).
It is suggested (Routti et al. 2019) that the above-noted declines in tetraBDE concentrations in Barents Sea and East Greenland polar bears reflect the phase out of the production of the commercial pentaBDE mixture (a listed POP comprising both tetra- and pentaBDE as the main components) in Europe in the late 1990s, and in the USA in the mid-2000s. It is also suggested (Routti et al. 2019) that the stability of hexaBDE concentrations in all polar bear subpopulations may result from the biodegradation (debromination) of recent emissions of decaBDE, noting that although production (but not import) was phased out firstly in Europe (1999) and later in USA, in China—the largest producer of decaBDE mixtures (c-decaBDE) output remains constant.
The increase in PBDE concentrations in polar bear tissues from the 1970s to mid-1990s, followed by reductions in some PBDEs since the late 1990s is similar to trends in marine mammals all over the world (Guo et al. 2012).
Recent (2012–2016) Spatial Trends for Brominated Fire-retardant POPs in Polar Bears.
A review (Routti et al. 2019) of available data on contaminant body burdens in polar bears (covering the period 2012‒2016) shows that for brominated fire retardants, relative ΣPBDE concentrations for southern Hudson Bay > Barents Sea > East Greenland > western Hudson Bay > Chutki Sea and Kara Sea subpopulations (Figure 8.10), and notes that this is consistent with a previous study that sampled bears in the period 1996–2002 (Muir et al. 2016). It is suggested (Routti et al. 2019) that this pattern of PBDE contamination reflects proximity to the sites of production, noting that in earlier years PBDE mixtures were produced in greater quantities in the USA than in Europe or Asia.
In respect of HBCDD, a recent review (Routti et al. 2019) shows that East Greenland and Barents Sea polar bear subpopulations carried greater concentrations than Hudson Bay bears (Figure 8.10), and notes that is consistent with the higher use of HBCDD in Europe relative to the rest of the world.
8.7 Summary
POPS are organic compounds that are problematic for humans and the environment for many reasons. These compounds (and many of their degradation products) are highly toxic, accumulate in the fatty tissue of living organisms including humans, are found at higher concentrations at higher levels in the food chain, remain intact for exceptionally long periods of time, and become widely distributed throughout the environment as a result of natural processes involving soil, water and, most notably, air. Due to the high risks posed by POPs, the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants was established in 2001 and by 2018 had been ratified by 182 nations. The original dirty dozen POPS were identified as posing significant risks to the humans and the environment. Since 2001 an additional 16 POPs have been added to the list of priority compounds in the Stockholm Convention and more are under consideration for listing.
POPs are often present in marine environments in complex mixtures of compounds and degradation products, and because many POPs (e.g. dioxins and furans) have similar chemical structures, properties, and toxicities, Toxicity Equivalent Factors (TEFs) and Toxic Equivalents (TEQs) are used to predict the toxicity of environmental samples.
The oceans are the ultimate sink for POPs after they are released into the environment. Because of the long-range global transport of POPs, their persistence and tendency to bioaccumulate and biomagnify, marine organisms high in the food chain (e.g. large mammals) are exposed to high POP concentrations. POPs can be passed from mother to offspring, which often results in higher concentrations in males than in females.
8.8 Study Questions and Activities
-
1.
Briefly explain the three different annexes placed on POPs in the Stockholm convention.
-
2.
Explain why different types of POPs tend to be present in the tissues of large marine mammals, and why the concentrations may differ depending on an organism’s age and sex.
-
3.
Select three POPs that are still intentionally produced and do some research to determine their current levels of production, uses, distribution in the environment, and the potential threats they pose to marine ecosystems.
-
4.
Define TEQs and TEFs and explain why they are used for predicting the toxicity of POPs.
Abbreviations
- AAS:
-
Australian Academy of Science
- ACS:
-
American Chemical Society
- BDE:
-
Bromodiphenyl ether
- BHC:
-
An acronym for “benzene hexachloride”—a name sometimes used inappropriately for lindane (gamma-hexachlorocyclohexane). Using the acronym BHC for lindane is misleading because the 6 carbon ring chemical structure in the lindane molecule is cyclohexane, not a benzene ring. A more appropriate acronym for lindane is gamma HCH (HexaChlorocycloHexane).
- CB:
-
Chlorinated biphenyl
- CDD:
-
Chlorinated dibenzodioxin
- CDF:
-
Chlorinated dibenzofuran
- DDD:
-
1,1-Dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane
- DDE:
-
1,1-Dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethylene
- DDT:
-
DichloroDiphenylTrichloroethane, a shortened version of a former name used for 1,1′-(2,2,2-trichloroethane-1,1-diyl)bis(4-chlorobenzene)
- HBB:
-
Hexabromobiphenyl
- HBCD:
-
Hexabromocyclododecane
- HBCDD:
-
Hexabromocyclododecane
- HCBD:
-
Hexachlorobutadiene
- HCH:
-
Hexachlorocyclohexane
- NDP:
-
National Dioxin Program
- OCDD:
-
Octachlorodibenzodioxin
- OCDF:
-
Octochlorodibenzofuran
- PBB:
-
Polybrominated biphenyl
- PBDE:
-
Polybrominated diphenyl ether
- PCB:
-
Polychlorinated biphenyl
- PCDD:
-
Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin
- PCDF:
-
Polychlorinated dibenzofuran
- PCN:
-
Polychlorinated naphthalene
- PCP:
-
Pentachlorophenol
- PeCB:
-
Pentachlorobenzene
- PFOA:
-
Perfluorooctanoic acid
- PFHxS:
-
Perfluorohexane sulfonic acid
- PFOS:
-
Perflurooctanoic acid
- POP:
-
Persistent Organic Pollutant
- POPRC:
-
Persistent Organic Pollutants Review Committee
- SCCP:
-
Short-chain chlorinated paraffin
- TCDD:
-
2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin
- TEF:
-
Toxic equivalent factor
- TEQ:
-
Toxic equivalent
- UNEP:
-
United Nations Environment Programme
- USA:
-
United States of America (USA)
- WHO:
-
World Health Organization
- WHO-TEF:
-
A TEF (toxic equivalent factor) published by the World Health Organisation
References
AAS (Australian Academy of Science) (1972) The use of DDT in Australia. Report No. 14. Australian Academy of Science, Canberra ACT
ACS (American Chemical Society) (2012) The legacy of Rachel Carson’s silent spring. American Chemical Society National Historic Chemical Landmarks. Available at http://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/education/whatischemistry/landmarks/rachel-carson-silent-spring.html. Accessed 6 Aug 2018
Bentzen T, Follmann E, Amstrup S, York G, Wooller M, O’Hara T (2007) Variation in winter diet of southern Beaufort Sea polar bears inferred from stable isotope analysis. Can J Zool 85(5):596–608
Breivik K, Sweetman A, Pacyna J, Jones K (2007) Towards a global historical emission inventory for selected PCB congeners—A mass balance approach. Sci Total Environ 377(2–3):296–307
Burkow I, Kallenborn R (2000) Sources and transport of persistent pollutants to the Arctic. Toxicol Lett 112–113:87–92
Carson R (1962) Silent spring. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, p 319
Dietz R, Rigét F, Sonne C, Born E, Bechshøft T, McKinney M, Drimmie R, Muir D, Letcher R (2013) Three decades (1983–2010) of contaminant trends in East Greenland polar bears (Ursus maritimus). Part 2: brominated flame retardants. Environ Int 59:494–500
EPHC (Environmental Protection and Heritage Council) (2005) National dioxins program: national action plan for addressing dioxins in Australia. Available at https://www.awe.gov.au/environment/protection/chemicals-management/dioxins. Accessed 6 Feb 2022
Gobas F, Mackay D (1987) Dynamics of hydrophobic organic chemical bioconcentration in fish. Environ Toxicol Chem 6:495–504
Green A, Larson S (2016) A review of organochlorine contaminants in nearshore marine mammal predators. J Environ Anal Toxicol 06(03):1000370
Guo Y, Shaw S, Kannan K (2012) Spatial and temporal trends of polybrominated diphenyl ethers. In: Loganathan B, Lam P (eds) Global contamination trends of persistent organic chemicals. CRC Press, Boca Raton, pp 33–72
Krieger L, Szeitz A, Bandiera S (2015) Evaluation of hepatic biotransformation of polybrominated diphenyl ethers in the polar bear (Ursus maritimus). Chemosphere 146:555–564
Letcher R, Gebbink W, Sonne C, Born E, McKinney M, Dietz R (2009) Bioaccumulation and biotransformation of brominated and chlorinated contaminants and their metabolites in ringed seals (Pusa hispida) and polar bears (Ursus maritimus) from East Greenland. Environ Int 35(8):1118–1124
Lippold A, Bourgeon S, Aars J, Andersen M, Polder A, Lyche J, Bytingsvik J, Jenssen B, Derocher A, Welker J, Routti H (2019) Temporal trends of persistent organic pollutants in Barents Sea polar bears (Ursus maritimus) in relation to changes in feeding habits and body condition. Environ Sci Technol 53(2):984–995
McKinney M, Dietz R, Sonne C, De Guise S, Skirnisson K, Karlsson K, Steingrímsson E, Letcher R (2011) Comparative hepatic microsomal biotransformation of selected PBDEs, including decabromodiphenyl ether, and decabromodiphenyl ethane flame retardants in Arctic marine-feeding mammals. Environ Toxicol Chem 30(7):1506–1514
Muir DCG, Backus S, Derocher AE, Dietz R, Evans TJ, Gabrielsen GW, Nagy J, Norstrom RJ, Sonne C, Stirling I, Taylor MK, Letcher R (2016) Brominated flame retardants in polar bears (Ursus maritimus) from Alaska, the Canadian Arctic, East Greenland, and Svalbard. Environ Sci Technol 40(2):449–455
Müller J, Muller R, Goudkamp K, Mortimer M, Haynes D, Paxman C, Hyne R, McTaggart A, Burniston D, Symons R, Moore M (2004) Dioxins in aquatic environments in Australia. National Dioxins Program Technical Report No. 6, Australian Government Department of the Environment and Heritage, Canberra. Available at http://www.environment.gov.au/protection/publications/dioxins-technical-report-06. Accessed 6 Feb 2022
Parliament of Australia (1972) Wildlife conservation. Report from the House of Representatives Select Committee, October 1972. The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia—1972 Parliamentary Paper No. 284. Available at https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/House_of_Representatives_committees?url=/report_register/bycomlist.asp?id=108. Accessed 6 Aug 2018
Routti H, Atwood T, Bechshoft T, Andrei Boltunov A, Ciesielski T, Desforges J, Dietz R, Gabrielsen G, Jenssen B, Letcher R, McKinney MD, Morris A, Rigét F, Sonne C, Styrishave B, Tartu S (2019) State of knowledge on current exposure, fate and potential health effects of contaminants in polar bears from the circumpolar Arctic. Sci Total Environ 664:1063–1083
Saba T, Boehm P (2011) Quantitative polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congener and homologue profile comparisons. Environ Forensics 12(2):134–142
Tartu S, Bourgeon S, Aars J, Andersen M, Polder A, Thiemann G, Welker J, Routti H (2017) Sea ice-associated decline in body condition leads to increased concentrations of lipophilic pollutants in polar bears (Ursus maritimus) from Svalbard, Norway. Sci Total Environ 576:409–419
Thiemann G, Iverson S, Stirling I (2008) Polar bear diets and Arctic marine food webs: insights from fatty acid analysis. Ecol Monogr 78(4):591–613
UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme) (2018) United nations treaty collection. Environment Chapter XXVII. Stockholm convention on persistent organic pollutants. Available at https://treaties.un.org/Pages/ViewDetails.aspx?src=TREATY&mtdsg_no=XXVII-15&chapter=27&clang=_en. Accessed 6 Feb 2022
UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme) (2015) Persistent Organic Pollutants Review Committee, UNEP/POPS/POPRC.11/10/Add.1.Decabromodiphenyl Ether (Commercial Mixture, c-decaBDE): risk management evaluation. Stockholm Convention, Rome, pp 1–47. Available at http://chm.pops.int/Portals/0/download.aspx?d=UNEP-POPS-POPRC.11-10-Add.1.English.doc. Accessed 6 Feb 2022
Van den Berg M, Birnbaum L, Denison M, De Vito M, Farland W, Feeley M, Fiedler H, Hakansson H, Hanberg A, Haws L, Rose M, Safe S, Schrenk D, Tohyama C, Tritscher A, Tuomisto J, Tysklind M, Walker N, Peterson R (2006) The 2005 World Health Organization reevaluation of human and mammalian toxic equivalency factors for dioxins and dioxin-like compounds. Toxicol Sci 93(2):223–241
Vetter W, Gall V, Skirnisson K (2015) Polyhalogenated compounds (PCBs, chlordanes, HCB and BFRs) in four polar bears (Ursus maritimus) that swam malnourished from East Greenland to Iceland. Sci Total Environ 533:290–296
Vijgen J (2006) The legacy of Lindane HCH isomer production. Main report. A global overview of residue management, formulation and disposal. International HCH and Pesticides Association. Available at http://www.ihpa.info/docs/library/reports/Lindane%20Main%20Report%20DEF20JAN06.pdf. Accessed 6 Feb 2022
Wania F, Mackay D (1999) The evolution of mass balance models of persistent organic pollutant fate in the environment. Environ Pollut 100:223–240
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Open Access This chapter is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license and indicate if changes were made.
The images or other third party material in this chapter are included in the chapter's Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the chapter's Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder.
Copyright information
© 2023 The Author(s)
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Mortimer, M., Reichelt-Brushett, A. (2023). Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs). In: Reichelt-Brushett, A. (eds) Marine Pollution – Monitoring, Management and Mitigation . Springer Textbooks in Earth Sciences, Geography and Environment. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-10127-4_8
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-10127-4_8
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-031-10126-7
Online ISBN: 978-3-031-10127-4
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)