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Toxicological significance of non‐, mono‐ and di‐ortho‐substituted polychlorinated biphenyls in oysters from galveston and tampa bays
Author(s) -
Sericano Jose L.,
Wade Terry L.,
Brooks James M.,
Safe Stephen H.
Publication year - 1994
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.5620131111
Subject(s) - congener , environmental chemistry , toxicity , crassostrea , polychlorinated biphenyl , chemistry , toxic equivalency factor , oyster , toxicology , ostreidae , acute toxicity , contamination , persistent organic pollutant , shellfish , biology , ecology , fishery , aquatic animal , fish <actinopterygii> , organic chemistry
Concentrations of non ortho (77, 126, and 169), mono‐ortho (105 and 118) and di‐ortho (128 and 138) substituted PCB congeners were measured in oysters from Galveston and Tampa bays, and reported toxic equivalent factors were used to assess their toxicity Most of the relative toxicity encountered in the oysters analyzed during this study was due to the presence of planar non‐ortho‐PCBs (53 8–94 3%), particularly congener 126 In contrast, the contribution of di‐ortho‐substituted PCB congeners to the total relative toxicity of the samples was negligible (<1%) On average, the contribution of each of these non, mono, and di ortho substituted PCB congeners to the total toxicity encountered in oysters from Galveston and Tampa bays were 126 > 118 ≥ 169 ≥ 105 > 77 » 138 > 128 and 126 > 118 > 169 ≥ 77 > 105 » 138 > 128, respectively Based on the reported lower clearance rates of non ortho and mono ortho‐substituted PCB congeners compared to other congeners within the same chlorination level, contaminated oysters that are depurated in clean environments will lower their total PCB concentrations, but their original toxicity may not be proportionally reduced