A 50-years record of dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethanes and
hexachloro-cyclohexanes in lake sediments and penguin droppings on King George
Island, Maritime Antarctic
Affiliations: Institute of Polar Environment, University of Science
and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China | College of Science, China Agricultural University,
Beijing 100094, China
Abstract: Since the ban on the use of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) such as
dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT) and hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) in
agriculture, their levels have generally dropped. In a number of cases,
however, the levels of these OCPs were found to be unchanging or even
increasing after the ban. With the aim to unveil the possible causes of these
exceptions, we collected two lake cores from King George Island, West
Antarctica, and determined their accumulation flux profiles and temporal trends
of these OCPs. In the lake core sediments with glacier meltwater input, the
accumulation flux of DDT shows an abnormal peak around 1980s in addition to the
expected one in 1960s. In the lake core sediments without glacier meltwater
input, the accumulation flux of DDT shows a gradual decline trend after the
peak in 1960s. This striking difference in the DDT flux profiles between the
two lake cores is most likely caused by the regional climate warming and the
resulted discharge of the DDT stored in the Antarctic ice cap into the lakes in
the Antarctic glacier frontier. Furthermore, to investigate the change of OCPs
loadings in the Antarctic coastal ecosystem, we reconstructed the HCH and DDT
concentration profiles in penguin droppings and observed a gradual increase for
the former and a continuous decrease for the latter during the past 50 years.
The increase of HCH seems to be due to the regional warming from the early
1970s and the resulted HCH discharge to the coastal ecosystem by glaciers,
meltwater and the illegal use of HCH in the Southern Hemisphere in the recent
decade. The different temporal trends of HCH and DDT accumulation rate in the
lake core with glacier meltwater input and the aged penguin droppings can be
explained by their different water-soluble property.
Keywords: organochlorine pesticides (OCPs), DDT and HCH, lake sediments, penguin droppings, temporal trend, climate warming