Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica

After decades of primary emissions, reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) have accumulated in soils and snow/ice in polar regions. These reservoirs can be remobilized due to decreasing primary emissions or due to climate change-driven warmer conditions. Results from a sampling campaign...

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Published in:Environmental Science & Technology
Main Authors: Cabrerizo, Ana, Dachs, Jordi, Barceló, Damià, Jones, Kevin C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/67046/
https://doi.org/10.1021/es400471c
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spelling ftulancaster:oai:eprints.lancs.ac.uk:67046 2023-08-27T04:06:10+02:00 Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica Cabrerizo, Ana Dachs, Jordi Barceló, Damià Jones, Kevin C. 2013-04-12 https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/67046/ https://doi.org/10.1021/es400471c unknown Cabrerizo, Ana and Dachs, Jordi and Barceló, Damià and Jones, Kevin C. (2013) Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica. Environmental Science and Technology, 47 (9). pp. 4299-4306. ISSN 0013-936X Journal Article PeerReviewed 2013 ftulancaster https://doi.org/10.1021/es400471c 2023-08-03T22:25:32Z After decades of primary emissions, reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) have accumulated in soils and snow/ice in polar regions. These reservoirs can be remobilized due to decreasing primary emissions or due to climate change-driven warmer conditions. Results from a sampling campaign carried out at Livingston Island (Antarctica) focusing on field measurements of air–soil exchange of POPs show that there is a close coupling of the polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in the atmosphere and snow/ice and soils with a status close to air–surface equilibrium to a net volatilization from Antarctic reservoirs. This remobilization of PCBs is driven by changes in temperature and soil organic matter (SOM) content, and it provides strong evidence that the current and future remobilization and sinks of POPs are a strong function of the close coupling of climate change and carbon cycling in the Antarctic region and this is not only due to warming. Whereas an increase of 1 °C in ambient temperature due to climate change would increase current Antarctic atmospheric inventories of PCBs by 21–45%, a concurrent increase of 0.5% SOM would counteract the influence of warming by reducing the POP fugacity in soil. A 1 °C increase in Antarctic temperatures will induce an increase of the soil–vegetation organic carbon and associated POPs pools by 25%, becoming a net sink of POPs, and trapping up to 70 times more POPs than the amount remobilized to the atmosphere. Therefore, changes in soil biogeochemistry driven by perturbations of climate may increase to a larger degree the soil fugacity capacity than the decrease in air and soil fugacity capacity due to higher temperatures. Future research should focus on quantifying these remobilization fluxes and sinks for the Antarctic region. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Livingston Island Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints Antarctic Livingston Island ENVELOPE(-60.500,-60.500,-62.600,-62.600) The Antarctic Environmental Science & Technology 47 9 4299 4306
institution Open Polar
collection Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints
op_collection_id ftulancaster
language unknown
description After decades of primary emissions, reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) have accumulated in soils and snow/ice in polar regions. These reservoirs can be remobilized due to decreasing primary emissions or due to climate change-driven warmer conditions. Results from a sampling campaign carried out at Livingston Island (Antarctica) focusing on field measurements of air–soil exchange of POPs show that there is a close coupling of the polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in the atmosphere and snow/ice and soils with a status close to air–surface equilibrium to a net volatilization from Antarctic reservoirs. This remobilization of PCBs is driven by changes in temperature and soil organic matter (SOM) content, and it provides strong evidence that the current and future remobilization and sinks of POPs are a strong function of the close coupling of climate change and carbon cycling in the Antarctic region and this is not only due to warming. Whereas an increase of 1 °C in ambient temperature due to climate change would increase current Antarctic atmospheric inventories of PCBs by 21–45%, a concurrent increase of 0.5% SOM would counteract the influence of warming by reducing the POP fugacity in soil. A 1 °C increase in Antarctic temperatures will induce an increase of the soil–vegetation organic carbon and associated POPs pools by 25%, becoming a net sink of POPs, and trapping up to 70 times more POPs than the amount remobilized to the atmosphere. Therefore, changes in soil biogeochemistry driven by perturbations of climate may increase to a larger degree the soil fugacity capacity than the decrease in air and soil fugacity capacity due to higher temperatures. Future research should focus on quantifying these remobilization fluxes and sinks for the Antarctic region.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cabrerizo, Ana
Dachs, Jordi
Barceló, Damià
Jones, Kevin C.
spellingShingle Cabrerizo, Ana
Dachs, Jordi
Barceló, Damià
Jones, Kevin C.
Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica
author_facet Cabrerizo, Ana
Dachs, Jordi
Barceló, Damià
Jones, Kevin C.
author_sort Cabrerizo, Ana
title Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica
title_short Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica
title_full Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica
title_fullStr Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica
title_sort climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in antarctica
publishDate 2013
url https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/67046/
https://doi.org/10.1021/es400471c
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.500,-60.500,-62.600,-62.600)
geographic Antarctic
Livingston Island
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Livingston Island
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Livingston Island
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Livingston Island
op_relation Cabrerizo, Ana and Dachs, Jordi and Barceló, Damià and Jones, Kevin C. (2013) Climatic and biogeochemical controls on the remobilization and reservoirs of persistent organic pollutants in Antarctica. Environmental Science and Technology, 47 (9). pp. 4299-4306. ISSN 0013-936X
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1021/es400471c
container_title Environmental Science & Technology
container_volume 47
container_issue 9
container_start_page 4299
op_container_end_page 4306
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