Occurrence and trophic magnification profile of triphenyltin compounds in marine mammals and their corresponding food webs

•We examined biomagnification potential of TPT in marine food webs in Hong Kong.•We detected high levels of TPT and its degradants in tissues of two marine mammals.•TPT or total-PTs in marine organisms increased significantly with trophic level.•The results confirmed the trophic magnification of TPT...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environment international Vol. 137; p. 105567
Main Authors: Sham, Ronia Chung-tin, Tao, Lily Shi Ru, Mak, Yanny King Yan, Yau, Jason Kin Chung, Wai, Tak Cheung, Ho, Kevin King Yan, Zhou, Guang-Jie, Li, Yongyu, Wang, Xinhong, Leung, Kenneth Mei Yee
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Netherlands Elsevier Ltd 01-04-2020
Elsevier
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Summary:•We examined biomagnification potential of TPT in marine food webs in Hong Kong.•We detected high levels of TPT and its degradants in tissues of two marine mammals.•TPT or total-PTs in marine organisms increased significantly with trophic level.•The results confirmed the trophic magnification of TPT and its degradants (DPT). The occurrence of triphenyltin (TPT) compounds, a highly toxic antifouling biocide, has been documented in marine environments and organisms all over the world. While some studies showed that marine mammals can be used as sentinel organisms to evaluate the pollution status of emerging contaminants in the environment because of their long lifespans and high trophic levels, information regarding the contamination status of TPT in marine mammal species has been limited over the past decade. More importantly, the primary bioaccumulation pathway of TPT in these long-lived apex predators and the corresponding marine food web is still uncertain. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the contamination statuses of TPT in two marine mammal species, namely the finless porpoise and the Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin, and assess the trophic magnification potential of TPT along the food webs of these two species, using stable isotope analysis, and chemical analysis with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The results showed that TPT is the predominant residue in majority of the analyzed individuals of two marine mammals, with concentrations ranging from 426.2 to 3476.6 ng/g wet weight in their muscle tissues. Our results also demonstrated an exponential increase in the concentration of TPT along the marine food web, indicating that trophic magnification occurs in the respective food webs of the two marine mammals. The range of trophic magnification factors of TPT in the food webs of finless porpoise and Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin was 2.51–3.47 and 2.45–3.39, respectively. These results suggest that high trophic organisms may be more vulnerable to the exposure of TPT-contaminated environments due to the high trophic magnification potential, and thus ecological risk of these compounds ought to be assessed with the consideration of their bioaccumulation potentials in these marine mammals.
ISSN:0160-4120
1873-6750
DOI:10.1016/j.envint.2020.105567