4.8 Article

Geographical PCB and DDT Patterns in Shearwaters (Calonectris sp.) Breeding Across the NE Atlantic and the Mediterranean Archipelagos

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 7, Pages 2328-2334

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es902994y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cabildo de Gran Canaria
  2. Junta de Andalucia
  3. Secretaria Regional do Ambiente da Regiao Autonoma dos Acores
  4. Gobern Balear
  5. Paque Nacional do Madeira
  6. Port-Cros National Park
  7. Direccao Geral do Ambiente
  8. Cape Verde
  9. Generalitat de Catalunya
  10. RC
  11. Fondos Feder
  12. PIF-CSIC [200680 F0162]
  13. MICINN [CGL2006_01315/Bos MCel, CGL2006-01315/BOS]
  14. Fundacion BBVA [BIOCON04/099]

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Although seabirds have been proposed as useful biomonitors for organochlorine contaminants (OCs) in marine environments, their suitability is still unclear. To understand the geographic variability and the influence of seabird trophic ecology in OC levels, we analyzed PCBs, DDTs, delta C-13, and delta N-15 in the blood of adult Calonectris shearwaters throughout a vast geographic range within the northeast Atlantic Ocean (from Cape Verde to Azores) and the Mediterranean Sea (from the Alboran Sea to Crete). OC concentrations were greater in birds from the Mediterranean than in those from the Atlantic colonies, showing higher and lower chlorinated PCB profiles, respectively. This large-scale pattern may reflect the influence of historical European runoffs in the Mediterranean basin and diffused sources for OCs in remote Atlantic islands. Spatial patterns also emerged within the Atlantic basin, probably associated with pollutant long-range transport and recent inputs of DDT in the food webs of shearwaters from Cape Verde and the Canary islands. Moreover, a positive association of OC concentrations with delta N-15 within each locality points out diet specialization as a major factor explaining differences in OCs at the intraspecific level. Overall, this study highlights wide range breeding seabirds, such as Calonectris shearwaters, as suitable organisms for biomonitoring large geographic trends of organochlorine contamination in the marine environment.

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