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Reed beds may facilitate transfer of tributyltin from aquatic to terrestrial ecosystems through insect vectors in the Archipelago Sea, SW Finland
Author(s) -
Lilley Thomas M.,
Meierjohann Axel,
Ruokolainen Lasse,
Peltonen Jani,
Vesterinen Eero,
Kronberg Leif,
Nikinmaa Mikko
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
environmental toxicology and chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.1
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1552-8618
pISSN - 0730-7268
DOI - 10.1002/etc.1878
Subject(s) - tributyltin , environmental science , dredging , sediment , phragmites , aquatic ecosystem , ecosystem , archipelago , environmental chemistry , terrestrial plant , marine ecosystem , terrestrial ecosystem , bioturbation , oceanography , ecology , wetland , biology , chemistry , geology , paleontology
Due to their adsorptive behavior, organotin compounds (OTCs), such as tributyltin (TBT), are accumulated in aquatic sediments. They resist biodegradation and, despite a ban in 2008, are a potential source for future exposure. Sediment OTCs have mostly been measured from sites of known high concentrations such as ports, shipping lanes, and marine dredging waste sites. The possible flow of OTCs from marine to terrestrial ecosystems, however, has not been studied. In the present study, the authors assessed whether sediments in common reed beds ( Phragmites australis ) accumulate TBT and whether chironomid (Diptera: Chironomidae) communities developing in reed‐bed sediments act as vectors in the transfer of TBT from aquatic to terrestrial ecosystems in the Airisto channel, Archipelago Sea. The authors also investigated whether distance from the only known source and depth and TBT concentration of the adjacent shipping lane affect reed‐bed concentrations. Thirty‐six sites along the Airisto channel were sampled at 2‐km intervals with triplicate samples from reed beds and the adjacent shipping lane for sediment and seven reed‐bed sites for chironomids, and these were analyzed with an solid phase extraction liquid chromatography tamdem mass spectrometry method. The closer to the source the sample site was, the higher the measured TBT concentrations were; and the deeper the shipping lane, the lower the concentration of TBT in reed‐bed sediments. The chironomid TBT concentrations correlated with reed‐bed sediment TBT concentrations and showed evidence of accumulation. Therefore, TBT may be transferred, through the food web, from aquatic to terrestrial ecosystems relatively close to a source through ecosystem boundaries, such as common reed beds, which are areas of high insect biomass production in the Archipelago Sea. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 2012; 31: 1781–1787. © 2012 SETAC