Abstract

Persistent insecticides have been classic environmental problems for 60-70 years─perhaps starting with Rachel Carson's indictment of DDT. Both national and international regulations have been put in place over the last 20-30 years to eventually eliminate these compounds from the environment. One focus is the atmosphere, which acts as a major long-range transport route of these pollutants from their numerous sources to many ecosystems. This paper will ask, "Have we have made any progress in eliminating insecticides from the atmosphere?" We will focus only on the atmosphere around the North American Great Lakes and only on concentration measurements made once every 12 days since about 1990 for six classic insecticides. The answer is that some of these compounds (lindane, α-HCH, and endosulfans) are well on their way to being virtually eliminated, while the concentrations of others (DDT, chlordane, and hexachlorobenzene) have not changed much. We speculate that this difference in elimination is a result of soil compaction in cities (DDT, etc.) versus soil mixing in rural areas (lindane, etc.).

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