articleScienceJul 12, 2007Closed access

Food WebSpecific Biomagnification of Persistent Organic Pollutants

Fisheries and Oceans Canada · Simon Fraser University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Substances that accumulate to hazardous levels in living organisms pose environmental and human-health risks, which governments seek to reduce or eliminate. Regulatory authorities identify bioaccumulative substances as hydrophobic, fat-soluble chemicals having high octanol-water partition coefficients (K(OW))(>/=100,000). Here we show that poorly metabolizable, moderately hydrophobic substances with a K(OW) between 100 and 100,000, which do not biomagnify (that is, increase in chemical concentration in organisms with increasing trophic level) in aquatic food webs, can biomagnify to a high degree in food webs containing air-breathing animals (including humans) because of their high octanol-air partition…

No related works found for this paper.