Occurrence, sources and transport of triazine herbicides in the Antarctic marginal seas
The extensively applied triazine herbicides are easily transported by ocean currents over long distances. This study analyzed ten triazine herbicides in the Antarctic marginal seas and the Southern Indian Ocean during the austral summer for the first time, addressing their largely unexplored behavio...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Marine pollution bulletin 2024-10, Vol.207, p.116820, Article 116820 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The extensively applied triazine herbicides are easily transported by ocean currents over long distances. This study analyzed ten triazine herbicides in the Antarctic marginal seas and the Southern Indian Ocean during the austral summer for the first time, addressing their largely unexplored behavior in remote marine environments. The total triazine herbicides showed great spatial heterogeneity, with a range of 20–790 pg/L and an average of 31 ± 66 pg/L. The waterborne transport of triazine herbicides in the Antarctic was affected by hydrological processes, especially the blocking and accumulation effect of the polar front. Variations in sea ice extent and temperature were also important influencing factors, resulting in elevated triazine herbicides in surface seawater of East Antarctica, but reduced levels in West Antarctica. Furthermore, the source apportionment results indicated that approximately 55 % of the herbicides originated from sugarcane cultivation, 28 % from algaecide use, and 16 % from corn and sorghum farming.
•Triazine herbicides is reported for the first time in the Antarctic marginal seas.•The blocking effect of polar front was obvious in the oceanic currents transport.•The usage in sugarcane cultivation contributed ∼50 % of triazine herbicides' sources. |
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ISSN: | 0025-326X 1879-3363 1879-3363 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2024.116820 |