Environment International (Apr 2020)

Large-scale monitoring and ecological risk assessment of persistent toxic substances in riverine, estuarine, and coastal sediments of the Yellow and Bohai seas

  • Seo Joon Yoon,
  • Seongjin Hong,
  • Seonju Kim,
  • Jongmin Lee,
  • Taewoo Kim,
  • Beomgi Kim,
  • Bong-Oh Kwon,
  • Yunqiao Zhou,
  • Bin Shi,
  • Peng Liu,
  • Wenyou Hu,
  • Biao Huang,
  • Tieyu Wang,
  • Jong Seong Khim

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 137

Abstract

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The Yellow and Bohai seas comprise one of the most rapidly developing regions in the world, but efforts to assess coastal pollution by persistent toxic substances (PTSs) on wide spatial scale are lacking. The present study aimed to (1) measure the concentrations of PTSs, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), alkylphenols (APs), and styrene oligomers (SOs) via large-scale sediment monitoring (total of 125 locations), (2) assess potential ecological risk of PTSs in sediments to coastal ecosystems, (3) estimate various sources and fresh inputs of PTSs, (4) determine distribution patterns of PTSs by human activities and land-use type, and (5) address decadal (2008–2018) changes in distributions of PTSs. The high concentrations of PAHs [> 7000 ng g−1 dry weight (dw)] in sediments were detected in Nantong in the Yellow Sea of China (YSC) and Huludao and Qinhuangdao in the Bohai Sea (BS), whereas lesser concentrations ( 0.05) among or within regions. Over time, concentrations of PAHs have generally declined, but sediment contamination has increased at some locations in China, with sources shifting from a mixture of PAHs types to those linked to diesel and gasoline combustion. Additional studies are needed on the fate and potential ecological risk posed by certain PTSs in hotspots. This is one of the first efforts providing backgrounds on PTS pollution in the large marine ecosystem of the Yellow and Bohai seas. Keywords: Coastal pollution, PAHs, Alkylphenols, Styrene oligomers, Ecological risk assessment, East Asia