Abstract

This study assessed the suitability of passive sampler extracts for use with a GC-MS-database rapid screening technique for around 940 organic chemicals. Chemcatcher™ passive sampler systems containing either Empore™ SDB-XC or C18FF disks were deployed at 21 riverine sites in and near Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, for a period of 28 days during September–October 2008. Methanolic elution of the SDB-XC and C18FF disks produced an extract that, after evaporation and inversion into hexane, was compatible with the GC-MS-database method enabling over 30 chemicals to be observed. The sources of the non-agricultural chemicals are still unclear, but this study was conducted in a relatively dry season where total rainfall was approximately 40 % lower than the long-term mean for the catchment during the study period. Thus, the risks may be greater in wetter seasons, as greater quantities of chemicals are likely to reach waterways as the frequency, extent and intensity of surface run-off events increase. This study provides valuable information for policy and decision-makers, both in Australia and other regions of the world, in that passive sampling can be conveniently used prior to analysis by multi-residue techniques to produce data to assess the likely risks trace organic chemicals pose to aquatic ecosystems.

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