American Chemical Society, Environmental Science and Technology, 6(41), p. 1841-1848, 2007
DOI: 10.1021/es061539l
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Hydroxylated PCBs (OH-PCBs) are well-known metabolites of PCBs in organisms, but there has been no direct study of their presence in the abiotic environment. In this study, OH-PCBs were determined in samples of rain, snow, and surface waters from sites in Ontario, Canada. OH-PCBs were quantified by gas chromatography with high-resolution mass spectrometry (GC-HRMS)in order to provide complete characterization of all OH-PCB homolog groups. OH-PCBs and PCBs were detected in all the samples analyzed, although half of the sigmaOH-PCBs could not be identified even with 71 individual congener standards. Total concentrations of OH-PCBs (sigmaOH-PCBs) in water ranged from 0.87 to 130 pg/L and from 230 to 990 pg/g in particulate organic matter. Total fluxes of those compounds in snow and rain were from < 1 to 100 pg/m2 and from < 1 to 44 pg/ m2/day, respectively. Higher sigmaOH-PCB fluxes in rain were found in southern Ontario than in a remote north-central Ontario site possibly reflecting greater sources of precursor PCBs near urban areas. Relatively higher sigmaOH-PCB concentrations were found in surface waters from sites near sewage treatment plant (STP) outfalls in the cities of Toronto (130 pg/L) and Hamilton (35 pg/L) than in offshore samples from Lake Ontario (1.6 pg/L). The results indicate that STPs are one of the sources of OH-PCBs for lake waters in this region. Similar homolog and congener profiles in rain and offshore surface water samples suggest that atmospheric deposition is the predominant source at offshore sites. This is the first report to detect the OH-PCBs in the abiotic environment.