Abstract

AbstractRecent reports from our laboratory on the occurrence of methylbutyltins in marine sediments and seawater suggest that these compounds are formed in the environment by the methylation of both tributyltin (TBT) and that­of its degradation products, i.e. dibutyltin and monobutyltin, to give MenBu(4−n)Sn for which n = 1, 2 and 3 respectively. We investigated the possibility of inducing methylation of TBT in seawater–sediment mixtures in experiments carried out in vitro using environmental materials collected from a yacht marina in Msida, Malta. Three water–sediment mixtures, which were shown to contain TBT, dibutyltin and monobutyltin but no other organotins, were spiked with tributyltin chloride (90 mg in 100 ml sea‐water/100 ml sediment); to one mixture was added sodium acetate and to another methanol, to act as possible additional carbon sources, and all mixtures were allowed to stand at 25 °C in stoppered clear‐glass bottles in diffused light for a maximum of 315 days. Speciation and quantification of organotins was performed using aqueous phase boroethylation with simultaneous solvent extraction followed by gas chromatography with flame photometric detection. The atmosphere inside the bottles quickly became reducing with abundant presence of H2S, and after an induction period of about 112 days, and only in the reaction mixture containing methanol, methyltributyltin (MeBu3Sn) was observed in both sediment (maximum concentration 0.87 µgSn g−1) and overlying water (maximum concentration 6.0 µgSn l−1). The minimum conversion yield of TBT into MeBu3Sn was estimated to be 0.3%. MeBu3Sn has a significantly lower affinity for sediment than TBT and, therefore, is more mobile in the marine environment, possibly also migrating into the atmosphere to generate a hitherto unsuspected flux of organotin into that phase. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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