Geographical. distribution of brominated diphenyl ether (BDE) flame retardants in the North American Great Lakes ecosystem in 2000 was determined by analysis of herring gull eggs (13 egg pools) from a network of 15 monitoring, colonies scattered throughout the lakes and connecting channels. SigmaBDEs were found at concentrations ranging from 192 to 1400 mug/kg, mean of 662 +/- 368 mug/kg (wet weight of egg contents). Highest concentrations were found in northern Lake Michigan and Toronto harbor (1000-1400 mug/kg) and lowest in Lake Huron. and Lake Erie (192-340 mug/kg). The distribution suggested that input from large urban/industrial areas through air or water emissions contributes local contamination to the herring gull food web in addition to background levels from regional/global transport. The congener composition was similar among sampling sites. Major congeners were BDE-47 (43%), BDE-99 (26%), BDE-100 (13%) BDE-153 (11%), BDE-154 (4%), BDE-183 (2%) and BDE-28 (1%). Temporal trends of BDE contamination, 1981-2000, were established by analysis of archived herring gull eggs (10 egg pools) from colonies in northern. Lake Michigan, Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron and eastern Lake Ontario. BDE-47, -99 and -100, and BDE-153, -154 and -183 concentrations were grouped separately for analysis because these two groups had different trends and are primarily associated with the Penta BDE and Octa BDE flame retardant formulations, respectively. SigmaBDE(47,99,100) concentrations were 5-12 mug/kg (wet weight) in 1981-1983 and then increased exponentially (p < 0.00001) at all three sites to 400-1100 mug/kg over the next 17 years. Doubling times were 2.6 years in Lake Michigan, 3.1 years in Lake Huron and 2.8 years in Lake Ontario. SigmaBDE(154,153,183) concentrations generally increased but varied in an erratic fashion among sites and decreased as a fraction of SigmaBDE overtime. Concentrations of SigmaBDE(154,153,183) were 100-200 mug/kg in eggs from all three colonies in 2000. Therefore, most of the dramatic increases in SigmaBDE concentrations observed over the past 20 years in the Great Lakes aquatic ecosystem seem to be connected with the Penta BDE formulation, which is mainly used as a flame retardant in polyurethane foam in North America. If present rates of change continue, concentrations of SigmaBDEs will equal or surpass those of SigmaPCBs in Great Lakes herring gull eggs in 10-15 years.