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PCB Exposure in Sea Otters and Harlequin Ducks in Relation to History of Contamination by the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill

Overview
Journal Mar Pollut Bull
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2010 Feb 6
PMID 20132952
Citations 2
Authors
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Abstract

Exposure to contaminants other than petroleum hydrocarbons could confound interpretation of Exxon Valdez oil spill effects on biota at Prince William Sound, Alaska. Hence, we investigated polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in blood of sea otters and harlequin ducks sampled during 1998. PCB concentrations characterized by lower chlorinated congeners were highest in sea otters from the unoiled area, whereas concentrations were similar among harlequin ducks from the oiled and unoiled area. Blood enzymes often elevated by xenobiotics were not related to PCB concentrations in sea otters. Only sea otters from the unoiled area had estimated risk from PCBs, and PCB composition or concentrations did not correspond to reported lower measures of population performance in sea otters or harlequin ducks from the oiled area. PCBs probably did not influence limited sea otter or harlequin duck recovery in the oiled area a decade after the spill.

Citing Articles

Quantitative Assessment of Current Risks to Harlequin Ducks in Prince William Sound, Alaska, from the Oil Spill.

Harwell M, Gentile J, Parker K, Murphy S, Day R, Bence A Hum Ecol Risk Assess. 2013; 18(2):261-328.

PMID: 23723680 PMC: 3662083. DOI: 10.1080/10807039.2012.650582.


A Quantitative Ecological Risk Assessment of the Toxicological Risks from Exxon Valdez Subsurface Oil Residues to Sea Otters at Northern Knight Island, Prince William Sound, Alaska.

Harwell M, Gentile J, Johnson C, Garshelis D, Parker K Hum Ecol Risk Assess. 2010; 16(4):727-761.

PMID: 20862194 PMC: 2938330. DOI: 10.1080/10807039.2010.501230.