Abstract

The deep-water environment and its ecosystem are becoming the ultimate sinks for Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs). A three-dimensional hydrodynamic-ecosystem-PCB coupled model was applied to the Sea of Japan (SoJ), where deep water is isolated from the surrounding oceans, to elucidate the accumulation processes of CB153 and assess the contributions of physical and biological processes to the accumulation. We suggest that the dissolved CB153 concentration formed a three-layer vertical structure in the SoJ: the highest concentration is in the intermediate layer (100–600 m), followed by those in the deep (600 m to the bottom) and surface layers (0–100 m). Different accumulation mechanisms in the northern and southern SoJ were discovered. The oceanic biological pump enhances the accumulation in the northern SoJ by taking CB153 out of the thermocline in summer and contributes 70 % to the accumulation in the intermediate layer; while the vertical advection contributes 70 % to the accumulation in the intermediate and deep layer in the southern SoJ.

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