Old pesticide still makes it to Arctic. (Environment).The pesticides known as chlordanes belong to a class of long-lasting organochlorine or·gan·o·chlo·rine n. Any of various hydrocarbon pesticides, such as DDT, that contain chlorine. pollutants that includes DDT DDT or 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1,1,-trichloroethane, chlorinated hydrocarbon compound used as an insecticide. First introduced during the 1940s, it killed insects that spread disease and feed on crops. and polychlorinated biphenyl, or PCB PCB: see polychlorinated biphenyl. PCB in full polychlorinated biphenyl Any of a class of highly stable organic compounds prepared by the reaction of chlorine with biphenyl, a two-ring compound. . Although Western countries have banned their use, chlordanes applied years ago gradually evaporate and circulate by air as far north as the Arctic. To pin down the pollutants' origins, Terry F. Bidleman of the Meteorological Service of Canada The Meteorological Service of Canada (MSC) is a division of Environment Canada, which primarily provides public meteorological information and weather forecasts and warnings of severe weather and other environmental hazards. in Downsview, Ont., and his colleagues analyzed air samples collected between 1984 and 1998 from Arctic sites in Canada, Finland, Russia, and Sweden. The researchers found that concentrations of several related chlordanes decreased by half every 5 to 10 years. Like many organic molecules, each chlordane chlordane (klōr`dān): see insecticide. compound comes in two mirrorimage variants called enantiomers enantiomers (i·nanˑ·tē· n. , which may break down at different rates in the environment. Using gas chromatography, the researchers measured the relative amounts of both forms of several chlordanes in the various Arctic sites. The bigger the difference in those amounts the older the chlordane. Based on shifts in the ratio of the enantiomers over time, the researchers determined that recently applied pesticide is responsible for a decreasing fraction of airborne chlordane in the Arctic. However, chlordanes applied to farms and homes in temperate regions years ago are still being released from the soil, drift north into the Arctic, and linger there, the researchers say in an upcoming issue of EnvironmentalScience and Technology. The finding strongly suggests that release of old pesticides accounts for the chlordanes in Arctic air, agrees Crispin J. Halsall, an environmental chemist at Lancaster University in England. --B.H. |
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