The Svalbard glaucous gull as bioindicator species in the European arctic: insight from 35 years of contaminants research

Verreault, J; Gabrielsen, GW; Bustnes, JO

HERO ID

1403746

Reference Type

Journal Article

Subtype

Review

Year

2010

Language

English

PMID

20044795

HERO ID 1403746
Material Type Review
In Press No
Year 2010
Title The Svalbard glaucous gull as bioindicator species in the European arctic: insight from 35 years of contaminants research
Authors Verreault, J; Gabrielsen, GW; Bustnes, JO
Journal Reviews of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
Volume 205
Page Numbers 77-116
Abstract Biomonitoring survey conducted with glaucous gulls from Svalbard have demonstrated that this top-predator-scavenger species accumulates a wide array of chemicals of environmental concern, including organohalogens, trace elements, organometals, and several non-halogenated and non-metallic-compounds. Among these contaminants are those subjected to global bans or restrictions in North America and Europe (e.g., legacy OC's, penta-, and octa-PBDE technical mixtures and mercury). In addition, some currently produced chemicals were found in gulls that lack and global use regulation (e.g., deca-PBDE , HBCD, and other non-PBDE BFR additives, siloxanes, and selected PFASs). Svalbard glaucous gulls are also exposed to contaminant metabolites that, at time, are more bioactive than their precursors (e.g., oxychlordane, p,p'-DDE, OH- and MeSo2-PCBs, and OH-PBDEs) Concentrations of legacy OCs (PCBs, DDTs, CHLs, CBzs, dieldrin, PCDD/Fs, and mirec) in tissues, blood, and eggs of Svalbard glaucous gulls have displayed the highest contamination levels among glaucous gull populations that inhabit Greenland (Cleemann et al. 2000) Jan Mayen (Gabrielsen et al. 1997), Alaska (Vander Pol et al. 2009), and the Canadian Arctic (Braune et a. 2005). To date, measurements obtaines on more novel organohalogens (e.g., OH- and MeSo2-containing metabolites, BFRs and PFASs) in Svalbard glaucous gull samples generally confirm that the spatial and trophodynamic trends of the legacy OC concentrations, whereas no clear trend emerges from surveys of trace elements and organometals. Using the glaucous gull as biosentinel species provides clear evidence that Svalbard and the European Arctic environment is exposed to a complex mixture of legacy and more recently introduced PBT-like substances.
Doi 10.1007/978-1-4419-5623-1_2
Pmid 20044795
Wosid WOS:000274026300002
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Journal: ISSN:
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword SURVEY