Abstract

The National Benthic Surveillance Project (NBSP), a component of NOAA's National Status and Trends Program, monitored sediment and bottomfish for chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides (CHs), PCBs and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) at selected urban and nonurban sites along the west coast of the USA from 1984 to 1993. This project successfully generated an extensive data set to evaluate the recent status and trends of environmental quality in coastal waters. This article summarizes and interprets the status of selected PAHs, PCBs and CHs in surficial sediments and selected species of bottom-feeding fish for 50 sites in Alaska, Washington, Oregon and California for the first 7 years (1984–1990) of the NBSE. The highest concentrations of most sediment-associated organic contaminants were present in the most highly urbanized areas, and many of the organic contaminants were bioaccumulated by indigenous marine fish species. The concentrations of PAHs and CHs in sediments generally correlated with levels of these compounds or their derivatives in bottom-dwelling fish. Assessment of trends in the concentrations of chlordanes, dieldrin, DDTs, PAHs and PCBs for the 7 year period from 1984–1990 suggest that, since the mid-1980s, concentrations of the persistent CHs, such as PCBs and DDTs in sediment and fish, show no consistent temporal trends, whereas levels of PAHs, which are nonpoint source contaminants, showed consistent increases at both nonurban and urban near-coastal sites.

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