The Amazon River: A Major Source of Organic Plastic Additives to the Tropical North Atlantic?

The release of emerging organic contaminants is identified among the most critical hazards to the marine environment, and plastic additives have received growing attention due to their worldwide distribution and potential deleterious effects. Here, we report dissolved surface water concentrations of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2019-07, Vol.53 (13), p.7513-7521
Hauptverfasser: Schmidt, Natascha, Fauvelle, Vincent, Ody, Anouck, Castro-Jiménez, Javier, Jouanno, Julien, Changeux, Thomas, Thibaut, Thierry, Sempéré, Richard
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container_end_page 7521
container_issue 13
container_start_page 7513
container_title Environmental science & technology
container_volume 53
creator Schmidt, Natascha
Fauvelle, Vincent
Ody, Anouck
Castro-Jiménez, Javier
Jouanno, Julien
Changeux, Thomas
Thibaut, Thierry
Sempéré, Richard
description The release of emerging organic contaminants is identified among the most critical hazards to the marine environment, and plastic additives have received growing attention due to their worldwide distribution and potential deleterious effects. Here, we report dissolved surface water concentrations of two important families of plastic additives (organophosphate esters (OPEs) and bisphenols) and other related organic compounds (perfluorinated chemicals) measured in the North Atlantic from Cape Verde to the West Indies. We found that OPEs were the most abundant contaminants, reaching remarkably high concentrations in open ocean waters (1200 km offshore of the American Coast, at the location of the Amazon river plume during the sampling period), with up to 1.3 μg L–1 (Σ9OPEs). A Lagrangian analysis confirmed that these high concentrations of contaminants originated from the Amazon River plume and were transported more than 3000 km by the North Brazil Current and its retroflection. We thus consider the Amazon River as a major source of organic contaminants of emerging concern to the tropical North Atlantic Ocean and suggest that medium-/long-range contaminant transport occurs, most certainly facilitated by the highly stratified conditions offered by the river plume.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.est.9b01585
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source ACS Publications
subjects Additives
Bisphenols
Chemical industry
Contaminants
Environmental Sciences
Esters
Hazard identification
Marine environment
Marine pollution
Organic chemistry
Organic compounds
Organic contaminants
Organophosphates
Plastics
River plumes
Rivers
Surface water
title The Amazon River: A Major Source of Organic Plastic Additives to the Tropical North Atlantic?
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