Abstract
Concentrations of PCB congeners and organochlorine (OC) pesticides were studied in archived fin whale ( Balaenoptera physalus) blubber samples collected in 1971–1972 from Newfoundland (Nfld) and Nova Scotia (NS) with the objective of obtaining a historical perspective on contaminant levels and proportions at a time when many persistent OCs were still in use. Concentrations of ΣPCBs and ΣDDTs in the blubber of 17 fin whales from historical whaling stations in 1971–1972 were generally in agreement with previously reported values for fin whales from Atlantic Canada. Although some differences in sex and body length (age) distribution of samples occurred, significant differences were detected in the concentrations and patterns of PCBs, DDTs and chlordanes in whales from Nfld and NS, supporting ecological evidence that whales from these regions represent relatively separate stocks. Temporal and geographical variations were examined by comparing data to those reported for fin whales from the St Lawrence Estuary (StL) in 1991 by Gauthier et al. (1997a). Significantly higher levels of ΣDDT, ΣCHL and HCB were found in the NS (1971–1972) stock compared with the StL (1991) animals, and in HCB between the Nfld stock (1971–1972) and the StL (1991) animals, as well as higher p,p′-DDE/ΣDDT and lower p,p′-DDT/ΣDDT ratios in the 1991 whales suggesting that temporal trends in these whales between the 1970s and 1990s were consistent with those in other marine mammals in Atlantic Canada. Evidence also suggests that geographical variations in patterns may occur for individuals from two relatively distinct stocks of fin whales in Atlantic Canada (NS, Nfld) and perhaps for one population (StL) related to, but recognisably different from the NS stock.
Published Version
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