Abstract
Twelve air samples collected over the Indian Ocean by a high
volume air sampler between August 2004 and August 2005 were
analyzed for selected polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners and
organochlorine pesticides. The region of the Indian Ocean and
adjacent countries is likely to be acting as a source of selected
POPs to the global environment. Data were compared with those
reported for the last 30 years to examine historical trends of
selected persistent organic pollutants (POPs) over the Indian
Ocean. Compound concentrations were influenced by the proximity to
land and air mass origins. Higher concentrations of atmospheric
ªPCBs (50-114 pg m-3) were found on the remote islands
of Chagos Archipelago and Gan, Maldives, and in the proximity of
Jakarta, Indonesia, and Singapore. Military activities and
unregulated waste combustion were identified as possible sources
for atmospheric PCB contaminations at the more remote areas. The
highest concentrations of organochlorine pesticides were found
adjacent to the coastline of Sumatra and Singapore, where
ªDDTs (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane) and
ªHCHs (hexacyclohexanes) were as high as 30 and 100 pg
m-3, respectively. A comparison study for the last 30 years over
six regions of the Indian Ocean showed that the concentrations of
organochlorine pesticides have declined significantly, by a
magnitude of two, since the mid 1970s, but were highest at the
beginning of the 1990s. The time trend of PCB contamination in the
atmosphere over the Indian Ocean is less apparent. The decline of
atmospheric POPs over the Indian Ocean may be due to international
regulation of the use of these compounds.
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