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Bioaccumulation and distribution of perfloroalkyl acids in seafood products from Bohai Bay, China
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Citations
28
References
2012
Year
BioconcentrationBohai BayEngineeringSeafood ProductsOcean PollutionFood ContaminantMarine ChemistryChemical ContaminantFood ChemistryEnvironmental ChemistryMarine PollutionToxicologyMore PfoaChromatographyPersistent Organic PollutantSouth KoreaEcotoxicologyPerfloroalkyl AcidsFood SafetyPer- And Polyfluoroalkyl SubstancesEnvironmental EngineeringMicrobiologyEnvironmental ToxicologyMarine BiologyMedicine
Ten perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) were measured in seafood collected from Bohai Bay, China in 2010. The summed concentrations of the PFAAs were in the ranges of not detected to 194 ng/g dry weight and 4.0 to 304 ng/g dry weight for invertebrates and fish, respectively. The levels of perflurooctanesulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) in the seafood were lower than those from North America, the Mediterranean Sea, and South Korea. Living habitat, trophic level, and feeding habits had important impacts on the bioaccumulation and distribution of PFAAs in the seafood. The species at higher trophic levels had the potential to accumulate more PFAAs than benthic invertebrates. Tidal-flat organisms tended to accumulate more PFOA than PFOS, whereas the opposite was seen for shallow-water species. For all the species, PFOS and PFOA were partitioned preferentially in the liver or viscera. Risk assessment indicated that the current level of PFAAs in the seafood of Bohai Bay does not represent an immediate source of harm to public health.
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