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Persistent organic pollutants are still present in surface marine sediments from the Seto Inland Sea, Japan
Summary
Researchers measured legacy persistent organic pollutants (PCBs, DDTs, HCHs, chlordanes) in surface sediments across Japan's Seto Inland Sea and found that historically contaminated deep sediments, resuspended by currents, continue to elevate surface concentrations despite decades of regulatory bans.
Although persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are currently banned or strictly controlled under the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, POPs are still distributed worldwide due to their environmental persistence, atmospheric transport, and bioaccumulation. Herein we investigated the current concentrations of POPs in the sediments from Seto Inland Sea, Japan and sought to clarify the factors currently controlling the POPs concentration of the surface sediments from Seto Inland Sea. The concentrations of hexachlorocyclohexane isomers (HCHs), dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane and its metabolites (DDTs), and chlordane isomers (CHLs) in sediments from Seto Inland Sea were <0.002-1.20 ng g, 0.01-2.51 ng g, and 0.01-0.48 ng g, respectively. Resuspension increased the concentrations of HCHs, HCB, and DDTs in the surface sediment with the release of historically contaminated pollutants accumulated in a lower layer. We speculate that CHLs in air that were removed by atmospheric deposition affects the concentration of CHLs in surface sediments.
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