1. Evidence for organochlorine contamination in tissues of salmonids in Lake Tahoe.
- Author
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Datta S, Ohyama K, Dunlap DY, and Matsumura F
- Subjects
- Animals, California, Dichlorodiphenyl Dichloroethylene analysis, Environmental Monitoring, Nevada, Polychlorinated Biphenyls analysis, Adipose Tissue chemistry, Air Pollutants analysis, Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated analysis, Insecticides analysis, Muscle, Skeletal chemistry, Salmon, Trout, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis
- Abstract
To evaluate the extent of organochlorine pollution in the Sierra Nevada ecosystem, residues of certain organochlorines in lake trout and Kokanee fish from Lake Tahoe, an alpine lake located between the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range and the Carson Range of California and Nevada, were analyzed. Multiresidue analysis in fish muscle revealed wet weight concentrations of total polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in the range 18 to 430 ppb and of p,p'-DDE in the range 5 to 85 ppb in the two fish species studied. In one large lake trout sample (6.6 kg), which was studied in more detail as compared with others, residue levels of PCB (267 ppb), toxaphene (154 ppb), a chlordane mixture (78 ppb), and a DDT mixture (154 ppb) were found in muscle. Full spectra of specific PCB congeners and p,p'-DDE were obtained from fish fat tissues and their identities were confirmed using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The results of total PCB analysis indicated that residues found in fish consisted mostly of moderately (tri- to tetrachloro-) to highly (penta- to heptachloro-) chlorinated biphenyls. For all fish residues analyzed, the best match to PCB residue profiles was with Aroclor 1260 or 1262., (Copyright 1999 Academic Press.)
- Published
- 1999
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