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1.
Chemosphere ; 360: 142436, 2024 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38797214

This study sought to develop a non-targeted workflow using high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) to investigate previously unknown PFAS in consumer food packaging samples. Samples composed of various materials for different food types were subjected to methanolic extraction, controlled migration with food simulants and total oxidizable precursor (TOP) assay. The developed HRMS workflow utilized many signatures unique to PFAS compounds: negative mass defect, diagnostic breakdown structures, as well as retention time prediction. Potential PFAS features were identified in all packaging studied, regardless of food and material types. Five tentatively identified compounds were confirmed with analytical standards: 6:2 fluorotelomer phosphate diester (6:2 diPAP) and one of its intermediate breakdown products 2H-perfluoro-2-octenoic acid (6:2 FTUCA), perfluoropentadecanoic acid (PFPeDA), perfluorohexadecanoic acid (PFHxDA) and perfluorooctadecanoic acid (PFOcDA). Longer perfluorocarboxylic acids including C17 and C19 to C24 were also found present within a foil sample. Concentrations of 6:2 FTUCA ranged from 0.78 to 127 ng g-1 in methanolic extracts and up to 6 ng g-1 in food simulant after 240 h migration test. These results demonstrate the prevalence of both emerging and legacy PFAS in food packaging samples and highlight the usefulness of non-targeted tools to identify PFAS not included in targeted methods.


Fluorocarbons , Food Packaging , Fluorocarbons/analysis , Food Contamination/analysis , Mass Spectrometry
2.
Environ Int ; 185: 108514, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38394915

Anatoxin-a and its analogues are potent neurotoxins produced by several genera of cyanobacteria. Due in part to its high toxicity and potential presence in drinking water, these toxins pose threats to public health, companion animals and the environment. It primarily exerts toxicity as a cholinergic agonist, with high affinity at neuromuscular junctions, but molecular mechanisms by which it elicits toxicological responses are not fully understood. To advance understanding of this cyanobacteria, proteomic characterization (DIA shotgun proteomics) of two common fish models (zebrafish and fathead minnow) was performed following  (±) anatoxin-a exposure. Specifically, proteome changes were identified and quantified in larval fish exposed for 96 h (0.01-3 mg/L (±) anatoxin-a and caffeine (a methodological positive control) with environmentally relevant treatment levels examined based on environmental exposure distributions of surface water data. Proteomic concentration - response relationships revealed 48 and 29 proteins with concentration - response relationships curves for zebrafish and fathead minnow, respectively. In contrast, the highest number of differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) varied between zebrafish (n = 145) and fathead minnow (n = 300), with only fatheads displaying DEPs at all treatment levels. For both species, genes associated with reproduction were significantly downregulated, with pathways analysis that broadly clustered genes into groups associated with DNA repair mechanisms. Importantly, significant differences in proteome response between the species was also observed, consistent with prior observations of differences in response using both behavioral assays and gene expression, adding further support to model specific differences in organismal sensitivity and/or response. When DEPs were read across from humans to zebrafish, disease ontology enrichment identified diseases associated with cognition and muscle weakness consistent with the prior literature. Our observations highlight limited knowledge of how (±) anatoxin-a, a commonly used synthetic racemate surrogate, elicits responses at a molecular level and advances its toxicological understanding.


Cyanobacteria Toxins , Cyprinidae , Tropanes , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Animals , Humans , Zebrafish/metabolism , Proteome/metabolism , Larva , Proteomics , Cyprinidae/metabolism , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity
3.
J Hazard Mater ; 459: 132062, 2023 10 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37480610

Seafood is a dominant source of human exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Existing studies on foodborne PFAS exposure have focused on only a subset of these compounds. Here, we conducted a pilot study to screen 33 PFAS in 46 seafood samples from a cross-section of national and local stores in the US. Low levels of 8 PFAS were measured in 74% of the samples, predominated by PFHxS (59%). Total PFAS ranged between 0.12 and 20 ng/g; highest levels were measured in Estonia-sourced smelt. The highest median levels were of PFOA (0.84 ng/g) with elevated concentrations found in Chinese clams (2.4 ng/g), which exceeds the EU established maximum limits (MLs). Measured levels of PFHxS, PFOA, and PFNA also exceeded MLs in 24%, 7%, and 5% of the samples, respectively. For average consumption levels, exposures were below the EU established tolerable weekly intakes (TWIs). However, for more frequent consumption of flounder, catfish, and cod, exposures exceeded regulations, which warrants identifying vulnerable high seafood consuming populations. Accidental PFBS cross contamination from sample storage bags resulted in 100% detection in samples, highlighting the problem with post-purchase food handling practices such as storage and cooking that could also have a substantial impact on human exposure, potentially in larger amounts than the (sea)food itself.


Fluorocarbons , Food Contamination , Seafood , Fluorocarbons/analysis , Pilot Projects , Seafood/analysis , United States , Food Contamination/analysis
4.
Chemosphere ; 337: 139381, 2023 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37392795

The purpose of this study was to investigate the presence and levels of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in food packaging originating from different geographic locations. Food packaging samples were extracted and analyzed by targeted analysis with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) before and after a total oxidizable precursor (TOP) assay. Additionally, full-scan high resolution MS (HRMS) was used to screen for PFAS not included in the targeted list. Of the 88 food packaging samples, 84% had detectable levels of at least one PFAS prior to oxidation with a TOP assay, with 6:2 fluorotelomer phosphate diester (6:2 diPAP) found most frequently and at the highest levels (224 ng/g). Other frequently detected substances (in 15-17% of samples) were PFHxS, PFHpA and PFDA. Shorter chain perfluorinated carboxylic acids PFHpA (C7), PFPeA (C5) and PFHxS (C6) were present at levels up to 51.3, 24.1 and 18.2 ng/g, respectively. Average ∑PFAS levels were 28.3 ng/g and 381.9 ng/g before and after oxidation with the TOP assay. The 25 samples with highest frequency of detection and amounts of measured PFAS were selected for migration experiments with food simulants to better understand potential dietary exposure. PFHxS, PFHpA, PFHxA and 6:2 diPAP were measured in the food simulants of five samples at concentrations ranging from 0.04 to 12.2 ng/g and at increasing concentrations over the 10-day migration period. To estimate potential exposure to PFAS that had migrated from food packaging samples, weekly intake was calculated and ranged from 0.0006 ng/kg body weight/week for PFHxA exposure in tomato packaging to 1.1200 ng/kg body weight/week for PFHxS exposure in cake paper. These values were below the established EFSA maximum tolerable weekly intake (TWI) of 4.4 ng/kg body weight/week for the sum of PFOA, PFNA, PFHxS and PFOS.


Alkanesulfonic Acids , Environmental Pollutants , Fluorocarbons , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Chromatography, Liquid , Food Packaging , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Fluorocarbons/analysis , Alkanesulfonic Acids/analysis , Environmental Pollutants/analysis
5.
Limnol Oceanogr Lett ; 8(1): 162-172, 2023 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36777312

Freshwater ecosystems are experiencing increased salinization. Adaptive management of harmful algal blooms (HABs) contribute to eutrophication/salinization interactions through the hydrologic transport of blooms to coastal environments. We examined how nutrients and salinity interact to affect growth, elemental composition, and cyanotoxin production/release in two common HAB genera. Microcystis aeruginosa (non-nitrogen (N)-fixer and microcystin-LR producer; MC-LR) and Aphanizomenon flos-aquae (N-fixer and cylindrospermopsin producer; CYN) were grown in N:phosphorus (N:P) 4 and 50 (by atom) for 21 and 33 days, respectively, then dosed with a salinity gradient (0 - 10.5 g L-1). Both total MC-LR and CYN were correlated with particulate N. We found Microcystis MC-LR production and release was affected by salinity only in the N:P 50 treatment. However, Aphanizomenon CYN production and release was affected by salinity regardless of N availability. Our results highlight how cyanotoxin production and release across the freshwater - marine continuum are controlled by eco-physiological differences between N-acquisition traits.

6.
Limnol Oceanogr ; 68(2): 348-360, 2023 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36819961

Harmful cyanobacterial blooms are an increasing threat to water quality. The interactions between two eco-physiological functional traits of cyanobacteria, diazotrophy (nitrogen (N)-fixation) and N-rich cyanotoxin synthesis, have never been examined in a stoichiometric explicit manner. We explored how a gradient of resource N:phosphorus (P) affects the biomass, N, P stoichiometry, light-harvesting pigments, and cylindrospermopsin production in a N-fixing cyanobacterium, Aphanizomenon. Low N:P Aphanizomenon cultures produced the same biomass as populations grown in high N:P cultures. The biomass accumulation determined by carbon, indicated low N:P Aphanizomenon cultures did not have a N-fixation growth tradeoff, in contrast to some other diazotrophs that maintain stoichiometric N homeostasis at the expense of growth. However, N-fixing Aphanizomenon populations produced less particulate cylindrospermopsin and had undetectable dissolved cylindrospermopsin compared to non-N-fixing populations. The pattern of low to high cyanotoxin cell quotas across an N:P gradient in the diazotrophic cylindrospermopsin producer is similar to the cyanotoxin cell quota response in non-diazotrophic cyanobacteria. We suggest that diazotrophic cyanobacteria may be characterized into two broad functional groups, the N-storage-strategists and the growth-strategists, which use N-fixation differently and may determine patterns of bloom magnitude and toxin production in nature.

7.
Anal Chim Acta ; 1230: 340400, 2022 Oct 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36192067

Instances of food contamination with per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) continue to occur globally, but sample preparation and analytical methods are quite limited and often monitor for a small percentage of known PFAS. This study aimed to evaluate, validate, and compare performance of two instruments with the recently developed "quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged, safe, efficient, and robust" (QuEChERSER) sample preparation mega-method - a method developed to monitor chemicals over a broad range of physicochemical properties. Initial evaluation of the QuEChERSER mega-method for determination of PFAS in food demonstrated recoveries, matrix interferences, and co-extractive removal comparable to (or better than) US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) methods. Subsequent validation of QuEChERSER in beef, catfish, chicken, pork, liquid eggs, and powdered eggs on a high-resolution mass spectrometer achieved acceptable recoveries (70-120%) and precision (RSDs ≤20%) for all 33 target analytes at the 1 and 5 ng g-1 levels and 67-88% of analytes at the 0.1 ng g-1 level, depending on the matrix. Additional validation was performed by tandem mass spectrometry on a triple quadrupole instrument. This approach provided no non-detects and better recoveries at the 0.1 ng g-1 level than the HRMS method but exhibited more variability at 1 and 5 ng g-1 spiking levels. Analysis of NIST SRMs 1946 and 1947 gave accuracies of 70-117%. These results demonstrate the capability of combining PFAS analysis with a mega-method previously validated for 350 analytes, while collecting non-target data for future retrospective analysis of emerging alternatives with a high-resolution mass spectrometry method.


Fluorocarbons , Animals , Cattle , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Chromatography, Liquid , Retrospective Studies , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods
8.
J Agric Food Chem ; 70(16): 4805-4816, 2022 Apr 27.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35380818

Some components of plastic food packaging can migrate into food, and whereas migration studies of known components are required and relatively straightforward, identification of nonintentionally added substances (NIAS; unknowns) is challenging yet imperative to better characterizing food safety. To this aim, migration was investigated across 24 unique plastic food packaging products including plastic wrap, storage bags, vacuum bags, and meat trays. Gas and liquid chromatography separation systems coupled with Orbitrap mass analyzers were used for comprehensive nontargeted screening of migrants. Tentative identifications of features were assigned by searching commercial databases (e.g., NIST, MZCloud, ChemSpider, Extractables and Leachables) and filtering results based on mass accuracy, retention time indices, and mass spectral patterns. Several migrants showed elevated levels in specific food packaging types, particularly meat trays and plastic wrap, and varying degrees of migration over the 10 days. Eleven putative migrants are listed as substances of potential concern or priority hazardous substances. Additionally, migration amounts of an Irgafos 168 degradation product determined by semiquantitation exceeded proposed theoretical maximum migration values.


Food Packaging , Plastics , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Food Contamination/analysis , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/methods , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Plastics/chemistry
9.
Environ Sci Eur ; 33(1)2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34367861

BACKGROUND: Though anatoxin-a (antx-a) is a globally important cyanobacterial neurotoxin in inland waters, information on sublethal toxicological responses of aquatic organisms is limited. We examined influences of (±) antx-a (11-3490 µg/L) on photolocomotor behavioral responses and gene transcription associated with neurotoxicity, oxidative stress and hepatotoxicity, in two of the most common alternative vertebrate and fish models, Danio rerio (zebrafish) and Pimephales promelas (fathead minnow). We selected environmentally relevant treatment levels from probabilistic exposure distributions, employed standardized experimental designs, and analytically verified treatment levels using isotope-dilution liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Caffeine was examined as a positive control. RESULTS: Caffeine influences on fish behavior responses were similar to previous studies. Following exposure to (±) antx-a, no significant photolocomotor effects were observed during light and dark transitions for either species. Though zebrafish behavioral responses profiles were not significantly affected by (±) antx-a at the environmentally relevant treatment levels examined, fathead minnow stimulatory behavior was significantly reduced in the 145-1960 µg/L treatment levels. In addition, no significant changes in transcription of target genes were observed in zebrafish; however, elavl3 and sod1 were upregulated and gst and cyp3a126 were significantly downregulated in fathead minnows. CONCLUSION: We observed differential influences of (±) antx-a on swimming behavior and gene transcription in two of the most common larval fish models employed for prospective and retrospective assessment of environmental contaminants and water quality conditions. Sublethal responses of fathead minnows were consistently more sensitive than zebrafish to this neurotoxin at the environmentally relevant concentrations examined. Future studies are needed to understand such interspecies differences, the enantioselective toxicity of this compound, molecular initiation events within adverse outcome pathways, and subsequent individual and population risks for this emerging water quality threat.

10.
Harmful Algae ; 103: 102002, 2021 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33980442

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are increasing in magnitude, frequency, and duration caused by anthropogenic factors such as eutrophication and altered climatic regimes. While the concentrations and ratios of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus are correlated with bloom biomass and cyanotoxin production, there is less known about how N forms and micronutrients (MN) interact to regulate HABs and cyanotoxin production. Here, we used two separate approaches to examine how N and MN supply affects cyanobacteria biomass and cyanotoxin production. First, we used a Microcystis laboratory culture to examine how N and MN concentration and N form affected the biomass, particulate N, and microcystin-LR concentration and cell quotas. Then, we monitored the N, iron, molybdenum, and total microcystin concentrations from a hypereutrophic reservoir. From this hypereutrophic reservoir, we performed a community HAB bioassay to examine how N and MN addition affected the biomass, particulate N, and microcystin concentration. Microcystis laboratory cultures grown in high urea and MN conditions produced more biomass, particulate N, and had similar C:N stoichiometry, but lower microcystin-LR concentrations and cell quotas when compared to high nitrate and MN conditions. Our community HAB bioassay revealed no interactions between N concentration and MN addition caused by non-limiting MN background concentrations. Biomass, particulate N, and microcystin concentration increased with N addition. The community HAB amended with MN resulted in greater microcystin-LA concentration compared to non-MN amended community HABs. Our results highlight the complexity of how abiotic variables control biomass and cyanotoxin production in both laboratory cultures of Microcystis and community HABs.


Cyanobacteria , Microcystis , Microcystins , Micronutrients , Nitrogen
11.
Chemosphere ; 263: 127927, 2021 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32814137

Prymnesium parvum continues to spread globally, producing harmful algal blooms that release toxins known to cause fish kills. While previous work has identified possible P. parvum toxin(s) (e.g., prymnesins, fatty acids, fatty acid amides) and investigated treatment strategies targeted at minimizing cell abundance, studies examining efficacy of treatment approaches to remove toxins are lacking. To understand influences of sunlight on toxins stability and toxicity to fish, acutely toxic P. parvum cultures were exposed to three light scenarios (lab dark control, field dark, and field light) and then evaluated for acute toxicity to fish and prymnesins abundance. Previous work showed acute toxicity to fathead minnow larvae was ameliorated after 2 h of sunlight exposure, and results observed herein found an identical trend. Acute toxicity disappeared in light exposed filtrate, but filtrate exposed to 35 °C without sunlight remained acutely toxic to fish. Additionally, six prymnesins were identified through high-resolution mass spectrometry and abundance corresponded to acute toxicity levels. Prymnesins were present at the highest level in filtrate that was acutely toxic but diminished in filtrate that was exposed to light and correspondingly ameliorated acute toxicity to fish. These findings suggest prymnesins are responsible for measured acute toxicity and are photo-labile, which represents an important implication for treatment strategies.


Haptophyta/growth & development , Lipoproteins/chemistry , Sunlight , Toxins, Biological/toxicity , Water Pollutants, Chemical/toxicity , Animals , Cyprinidae , Fatty Acids , Harmful Algal Bloom , Larva , Mass Spectrometry
12.
Environ Sci Technol ; 54(14): 8848-8856, 2020 07 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32598138

Polar organic chemical integrative sampler (POCIS) is a passive sampling device that offers many advantages over traditional discrete sampling methods, but quantitative time-weighted average (TWA) concentrations rely heavily on the robustness of sampling rates. The effects of changing chemical concentration exposures on POCIS sampling rates and its ability to operate in an integrative regime were investigated for 12 pesticides across a range of environmentally relevant concentrations. In five independent 21-day experiments, POCIS devices were exposed to these compounds at constant concentrations ranging from 3 to 60 µg/L and multiple pulsed concentrations with maximum peaks ranging from 5 to 150 µg/L (TWA concentrations = 3 to 92 µg/L). For the 21-day exposures to constant and pulsed concentrations, there were no significant differences in the POCIS sampling rates between corresponding TWA concentrations. Similarly, there was no significant effect on POCIS ability to operate in an integrative regime. However, loss of linearity was visible for some replicates when exposed to higher pulsed concentrations over an extended period. Modeling and Freundlich isotherms did not predict sorbent saturation, but the extraction and reconstitution protocol likely contributed to atrazine dissolution and subsequent underestimation of sorbed chemical mass when HLB adsorption exceeded 400 µg.


Atrazine , Pesticides , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Environmental Monitoring , Organic Chemicals , Pesticides/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
13.
Sci Total Environ ; 715: 136835, 2020 May 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32007880

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are increasing in frequency, magnitude, and duration around the world. Prymnesium parvum is a HAB species known to cause massive fish kills, but the toxin(s) it produces contributing to this acute toxicity to fish have not been confirmed. In the present study, a 2 × 2 factorial design was employed to examine influences of salinity (2.4 or 5 ppt) and nutrient limitation (f/2 or f/8) on P. parvum acute toxicity to fish and produced molecules. Acute toxicity (LC50) of these cultures, following a 48-h mortality assay, ranged from 10,213 to 96,816 cells mL-1. Non-targeted analysis was performed using liquid chromatography high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) to investigate compounds contributing to the differential toxicological responses. When P. parvum elicited toxicity to fish, suspect screening confirmed the presence of several prymnesins, and the peak area of PRM-A (3 Cl; prymnesin2aglycone) was significantly (p < 0.05) and positively related to acute toxicity. In addition, a non-targeted approach to highlighting peaks that differ between two chemical fingerprints was developed, termed a relative difference plot, and used to search for peaks co-varying with P. parvum induced acute toxicity to fish. Several peaks were highlighted along with the prymnesins identified through suspect screening when acute toxicity to fish was observed.


Haptophyta , Animals , Chromatography, Liquid , Fishes , Harmful Algal Bloom , Mass Spectrometry
14.
Toxins (Basel) ; 11(10)2019 10 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31623095

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are increasing in magnitude, frequency, and duration globally. Even though a limited number of phytoplankton species can be toxic, they are becoming one of the greatest water quality threats to public health and ecosystems due to their intrinsic toxicity to humans and the numerous interacting factors that undermine HAB forecasting. Here, we show that the carbon:nitrogen:phosphorus (C:N:P) stoichiometry of a common toxic phytoplankton species, Microcystis, regulates toxin quotas during blooms through a tradeoff between primary and secondary metabolism. Populations with optimal C:N (< 8) and C:P (< 200) cellular stoichiometry consistently produced more toxins than populations exhibiting stoichiometric plasticity. Phosphorus availability in water exerted a strong control on population biomass and C:P stoichiometry, but N availability exerted a stronger control on toxin quotas by regulating population biomass and C:N:P stoichiometry. Microcystin-LR, like many phytoplankton toxins, is an N-rich secondary metabolite with a C:N stoichiometry that is similar to the optimal growth stoichiometry of Microcystis. Thus, N availability relative to P and light provides a dual regulatory mechanism that controls both biomass production and cellular toxin synthesis. Overall, our results provide a quantitative framework for improving forecasting of toxin production during HABs and compelling support for water quality management that limit both N and P inputs from anthropogenic sources.


Carbon/metabolism , Microcystins/metabolism , Microcystis/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Phosphorus/metabolism , Harmful Algal Bloom , Marine Toxins , Microcystis/growth & development , Secondary Metabolism
15.
J Chromatogr A ; 1599: 66-74, 2019 Aug 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30961962

Cyanobacteria can form dense blooms under specific environmental conditions, and some species produce secondary metabolites known as cyanotoxins, which present significant risks to public health and the environment. Identifying toxins produced by cyanobacteria present in surface water and fish is critical to ensuring high quality food and water for consumption, and protectionn of recreational uses. Current analytical screening methods typically focus on one class of cyanotoxins in a single matrix and rarely include saxitoxin. Thus, a cross-class screening method for microcystins, nodularin, anatoxin-a, cylindrospermopsin, and saxitoxin was developed to examine target analytes in environmental water and fish tissue. This was done, due to the broad range of cyanotoxin physicochemical properties, by pairing two extraction and separation techniques to improve isolation and detection. For the first time a zwitterionic hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography column was evaluated to separate anatoxin-a, cylindrospermopsin, and saxitoxin, demonstrating greater sensitivity for all three compounds over previous techniques. Further, the method for microcystins, nodularin, anatoxin-a, and cylindrospermopsin were validated using isotopically labeled internal standards, again for the first time, resulting in improved compensation for recovery bias and matrix suppression. Optimized extractions for water and fish tissue can be extended to other congeners in the future. These improved separation and isotope dilution techniques are a launching point for more complex, non-targeted analyses, with preliminary targeted screening.


Chromatography, Liquid , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Fishes , Marine Toxins/analysis , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Water/chemistry , Alkaloids , Animals , Bacterial Toxins/analysis , Cyanobacteria/chemistry , Cyanobacteria Toxins , Isotopes/analysis , Microcystins/analysis , Peptides, Cyclic/analysis , Saxitoxin/analysis , Tropanes/analysis , Uracil/analogs & derivatives , Uracil/analysis
16.
Environ Toxicol Chem ; 37(9): 2331-2339, 2018 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29978495

The effects of changing hydrodynamic conditions and changing temperatures on polar organic chemical integrative sampler (POCIS) sampling rates (Rs ) were investigated for 12 crop protection chemicals. Exposure concentration was held constant in each laboratory experiment, and flow velocities were calculated from measured mass transfer coefficients of the water boundary layer near the surface of POCIS devices. At a given temperature Rs generally increased by a factor of 2 to 5 between a stagnant condition and higher flow velocities (6-21 cm/s), but Rs for most compounds was essentially constant between the higher flow velocities. When temperature was varied between 8 and 39 °C for a given flow condition, Rs increased linearly. In general, Rs increased by a factor of 2 to 4 and 2 to 8 over this temperature range under flow and stagnant conditions, respectively. An Arrhenius model was used to describe the dependence of POCIS sampling rates on temperature. Adjustments of Rs for temperature did not fully explain observed differences between time-weighted average concentrations of atrazine determined from POCIS and from composite water sampling in a field setting, suggesting that the effects of other competing factors still need to be evaluated. Environ Toxicol Chem 2018;37:2331-2339. © 2018 SETAC.


Environmental Monitoring/methods , Hydrodynamics , Organic Chemicals/analysis , Temperature , Water/chemistry , Atrazine/analysis , Rheology , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
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