Bioaccumulation potential of persistent organic chemicals in humans

被引:101
作者
Czub, G
McLachlan, MS
机构
[1] Baltic Sea Res Inst, D-18112 Rostock, Germany
[2] Stockholm Univ, ITM, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden
关键词
D O I
10.1021/es034871v
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 [工学]; 0830 [环境科学与工程];
摘要
A model was used to explore the influence of physical-chemical properties on the potential of organic chemicals to bioaccumulate in humans. ACC-HUMAN, a model of organic chemical bioaccumulation through the agricultural and aquatic food chains to humans, was linked to a level I unit world model of chemical fate in the physical environment and parametrized for conditions in southern Sweden. Hypothetical, fully persistent chemicals with varying physical-chemical properties were distributed in the environment, and their bioaccumulation to humans was calculated. The results were evaluated using the environmental bioaccumulation potential (EBAP), defined as the quotient of the chemical quantity in a human divided by the quantity of chemical in the whole environment. Since the latter is closely related to emissions, EBAP is potentially a more useful tool for comparative risk assessment of chemicals than currently used medium-specific measures such as the fish-water bioaccumulation factor. A high environmental bioaccumulation potential, defined as >10% of the maximum EBAP, was found for chemicals with 2 < log K-ow < 11 and 6 < log K-OA < 12. While these chemical partitioning properties clearly influenced bioaccumulation at each trophic level, these effects tended to equalize over the food web. The fact that the transfer from the environment as a whole to humans was quite uniform over a large chemical partitioning space suggests that these partitioning properties are relatively unimportant determinants of human exposure compared to other factors such as the substance's persistence in the environment and in the food web.
引用
收藏
页码:2406 / 2412
页数:7
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]
A generic QSAR for assessing the bioaccumulation potential of organic chemicals in aquatic food webs [J].
Arnot, JA ;
Gobas, FAPC .
QSAR & COMBINATORIAL SCIENCE, 2003, 22 (03) :337-345
[2]
*BALT FISH ASS WOR, 2001, ICES CM 2001 ACFM, V18
[3]
RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN LIPOPHILICITY AND ROOT UPTAKE AND TRANSLOCATION OF NON-IONIZED CHEMICALS BY BARLEY [J].
BRIGGS, GG ;
BROMILOW, RH ;
EVANS, AA .
PESTICIDE SCIENCE, 1982, 13 (05) :495-504
[4]
CLARK T, 1988, ENVIRON SCI TECHNOL, V22, P120, DOI 10.1021/es00167a001
[5]
CZUB G, IN PRESS ENV TOXICOL
[6]
*GERM FED MIN CONS, 2003, ERN AGR BER BUND
[7]
Mechanism of biomagnification in fish under laboratory and field conditions [J].
Gobas, FAPC ;
Wilcockson, JB ;
Russell, RW ;
Haffner, GD .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1999, 33 (01) :133-141
[8]
DYNAMICS OF DIETARY BIOACCUMULATION AND FECAL ELIMINATION OF HYDROPHOBIC ORGANIC-CHEMICALS IN FISH [J].
GOBAS, FAPC ;
MUIR, DCG ;
MACKAY, D .
CHEMOSPHERE, 1988, 17 (05) :943-962
[9]
Quantitative structure activity relationships for predicting the bioaccumulation of POPs in terrestrial food-webs [J].
Gobas, FAPC ;
Kelly, BC ;
Arnot, JA .
QSAR & COMBINATORIAL SCIENCE, 2003, 22 (03) :329-336
[10]
POLYCHLORINATED-BIPHENYLS (PCBS) IN THE BRITISH ENVIRONMENT - SINKS, SOURCES AND TEMPORAL TRENDS [J].
HARRAD, SJ ;
SEWART, AP ;
ALCOCK, R ;
BOUMPHREY, R ;
BURNETT, V ;
DUARTEDAVIDSON, R ;
HALSALL, C ;
SANDERS, G ;
WATERHOUSE, K ;
WILD, SR ;
JONES, KC .
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 1994, 85 (02) :131-146