Distribution of organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in surface-mixed layer water and intertidal sediments of Lagos lagoon, Gulf of Guinea

Publication Date

12-20-2023

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Regional Studies in Marine Science

Volume

67

DOI

10.1016/j.rsma.2023.103187

Abstract

Organochlorinated pesticides (OCPs) were analysed in intertidal sediments and surface-mixed layer water of Lagos lagoon in Nigeria in order to elucidate the contamination levels, sources and distribution characteristics, and potential human and ecological health risks associated with exposures to OCPs. The total ∑ OCPs in sediments ranged from 222.35 to 2585.30 μg/kg dw, with a mean concentration range between 13.08 and 172.35 μg/kg dw, respectively. The most dominant OCP compounds in the sediments were dichlorodiphenylethanes (40%), chlors (26%), cyclodienes (17%), HCHs (9%), and endos (8%). The concentration (μg/kg) of individual ∑OCP groups in sediment decreased in the following order: ∑ dichlorodiphenylethanes > ∑ Chlors > ∑ Cyclodienes > ∑ HCHs > ∑ Endos. The ∑ OCPs in water ranged from 23.63 (mean concentration: 1.97 ng/L) to 172.05 ng/L (mean concentration: 13.23 ng/L). Dichlorodiphenylethanes (46%), cyclodienes (21%), chlors (14%), HCHs (12%), and endos (7%) were the most prevalent OCP compounds in investigated water samples. These locations are pollution hotspots for potential wastes arising from industrial effluents, heavy shipping activities, municipal wastes and discharges of transformer oil from abandoned power generation and transmission facilities. The total composition and β-, γ- and δ-HCH isomeric ratios suggest recent anthropogenic introduction of the HCHs into the lagoonal ecosystem compared to historical deposits. Dichlorodiphenylethanes (p,p′-DDD, p,p′-DDE, and methoxychlor) were ubiquitous except p,p′-DDT. Results indicate historical inputs of technical DDT with considerable biodegradation and photochemical transformations. Generally, the ∑ chlors in sediments and surface-mixed layer water samples decreased following heptachlor > heptachlor epoxide > α-Chlordane > γ-Chlordane. The α-chlordane/γ-chlordane ratios indicate a mix of recent commercial and historical chlordane contamination sources. Concentrations of most OCPs significantly exceeded sediment quality guidelines suggesting that toxicity to benthic-dwelling faunas is estimated to be likely.

Keywords

Ecological risk, Organic micropollutants, Organochlorinated pesticides, Sediment contamination, Water pollution

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