Abstract

From 1947 to 1971 the world's largest manufacturer of DDT discharged process wastes into the sewers of Los Angeles County. Roughly 870-1450 t of DDT were released to the ocean off Palos Verdes, CA, a portion of which (approximately 100 t) resides in sediments on the continental shelf and slope. The most abundant DDT compound in the sediments, p,p'-DDE, is degrading by reductive dechlorination, but the rate of transformation and factors controlling it are not well understood. In order to estimate in situ transformation rates and predict the long-term fate of p,p'-DDE, box cores were collected in 1992 and 2003 from a single location on the Palos Verdes Shelf and analyzed for 8 DDT compounds and 84 polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners. The PCBs show no evidence of dechlorination, and inventories did not change between 1992 and 2003. By contrast, the inventory of p,p'-DDE decreased by 43%, whereas that of p,p'-DDMU, the putative reductive dechlorination product, increased by 34%. The first-order transformation rate for p,p'-DDE at the study site is 0.051 +/- 0.006 yr(-1). A multistep reaction model suggests that inventories of p,p'-DDE and p,p'-DDMU will continue to decline, whereas that of p,p'-DDNU will reach a maximum around 2014.

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