Dear colleagues,

My coauthors and I are pleased to announce the publication of the following 
article in Environmental Research:

Simond A. E., Houde M., Lesage V. and Verreault J. (2017). Temporal trends of 
PBDEs and emerging flame retardants in belugas from the St. Lawrence Estuary 
(Canada) and comparisons with minke whales and Canadian Arctic belugas. 
Environmental Research, 156, 494-504 
(http://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2017.03.058).

ABSTRACT
An exponential level increase of the ubiquitous halogenated flame retardant 
(HFR) class polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) has been documented during the 
1990s in endangered belugas (Delphinapterus leucas) from the St. Lawrence 
Estuary (SLE), Eastern Canada. The recent worldwide bans and regulations of 
PBDE mixtures led to their replacement by alternative HFRs (so-called emerging 
HFRs) that are increasingly being reported in various environmental 
compartments. There are, however, limited knowledge on the spatial and temporal 
trends of PBDEs and emerging HFRs in cetaceans, especially after restrictions 
on PBDE usage. The first objective of this study was to investigate the 
occurrence of HFRs (35 PBDE congeners and 13 emerging compounds) in the blubber 
of belugas and minke whales (Balænoptera acutorostrata) found dead in the 
Estuary or Gulf of St. Lawrence as well as belugas from Nunavik (Canadian 
Arctic) collected as part of the Inuit subsistence hunt. A second objective was 
to investigate the trends of HFR concentrations in SLE beluga males between 
1997 and 2013. PBDEs were the most abundant HFRs in all three whale 
populations, while hexabromobenzene (HBB), Chlordene Plus (CPlus), Dechlorane 
Plus (DP), and Dechlorane 604 Component B (Dec-604 CB) were quantified in the 
majority of blubber samples. Overall, concentrations of emerging HFRs were 
notably greater in SLE belugas compared to the two other whale populations, 
with the exception of DP and Dec-604 CB that were found in greater 
concentrations in Canadian Arctic belugas. No significant trend in blubber PBDE 
concentrations was found in SLE belugas during this 17-year period. This 
suggests that global PBDE regulations are too recent to observe changes in PBDE 
concentrations in belugas from this highly HFR-exposed environment. In 
contrast, concentrations of HBB and CPlus in SLE belugas decreased slightly 
from 1997 to 2013, while DP increased up until 2000 and decreased slightly 
thereafter. The occurrence and temporal variations of PBDEs and their 
replacement products in these cetaceans warrant continuous monitoring.

KEYWORDS
Polybrominated diphenyl ether; Halogenated flame retardant; Temporal trend; 
Canadian Arctic; Toothed whale; Baleen whale; St. Lawrence

The publication is available at: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2017.03.058

For more information please contact me at 
simond.antoine_etie...@courrier.uqam.ca<mailto:simond.antoine_etie...@courrier.uqam.ca>

Cheers,

Antoine
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to