1. PCBs contamination in water and Mytilus edulis along the north Portuguese Atlantic Ocean coastline and analysis of potential carcinogenic risk to human health.
- Author
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Esteves, Ana Margarida, Alves, Rodrigo, Rocha, Eduardo, and Rocha, Maria João
- Subjects
WATER pollution ,PARTICULATE matter ,MYTILUS edulis ,SPRING ,MUSSELS ,POLYCHLORINATED biphenyls - Abstract
Seven seawater polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were measured in water (DAP), suspended particulate matter (SPM), and blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) collected from four beaches in northwest Portugal. PCBs were extracted using solid-phase-extraction, ultrasound-extraction and QuEChERS before GC–MS analysis. The two-year annual average concentrations of PCBs in DAP, SPM and the four-year analysis in mussels were ∼ 4.4 ng/L, ∼15.9 μg/kg, and ∼ 56.0 μg/kg. The results suggest higher concentrations of PCBs in summer for SPM and in spring for mussels, mainly those collected close to the Ave River estuary. The origins of PCBs remain uncertain. Risk assessment shows that PCBs in water are unlikely to harm local biota due to their low thyroid hormone toxicity equivalents (TEQ-TH; ∼1.4E-04 ng/L and ∼ 4.1E-04 μg/kg) and on WHO toxicity equivalents (TEQ-WHO; ∼2.1E-05 ng/L and ∼ 4.9E-05 μg/kg). However, the lifetime carcinogenic risk (LCR) for humans consuming local bivalves is concerning, as it exceeds 1.0E-06. [Display omitted] • 7 PCBs were quantified in water, particulate matter (2 years) and mussels (4 years) from the North Iberian seacoast. • All analysed matrices contained significant amounts of PCBs. • Toxic equivalents for PCBs in water point to low risks for local biota. • The Lifetime Carcinogenic Risk indicates that intake of local mussels poses cancer risks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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