Department of Physical and Environmental Sciences, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario M1C 1A4, Canada.
Environ Int. 2012 Nov 15;49:83-91. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2012.08.014. Epub 2012 Sep 14.
Concentrations of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in Inuit populations have been observed to decrease over the last decade. The main objective of this study was to develop a methodology to quantify the potential influence of intergenerational dietary transitions on human exposure to organic contaminants in the Arctic environment using PCB-153 as a case study. Long-term (1930-2050) dynamic simulations using realistic emission estimates were conducted using linked chemical fate and bioaccumulation models. Female body burdens were calculated over time assuming five diets with varying proportions of traditional and imported food items and then used to illustrate the potential variability at a community/population level. At any given time point, individuals consuming a 100% traditional diet (i.e. high intake of ringed seal blubber) have modelled body burdens approximately 15-150 times higher than individuals consuming a 100% imported food diet. Consumption of locally-harvested fish (e.g. Arctic cod) and seal meat are also associated with comparatively low body burdens. Decreased emissions are predicted to decrease the PCB-153 body burden of 30-year old females by 6 to 13-fold from 1980 to 2020 with dietary transitions accounting for an additional factor of 2-50 (i.e. 12-650 times lower in total) depending on the type of dietary transition and the origin of the imported food items. The model results indicate that dietary transitions are an important factor underlying the variability within and between subpopulations in addition to partially explaining the observed temporal trends. Specific information on the nature and timing of dietary transitions is highly valuable when interpreting biomonitoring data.
在过去的十年中,人们观察到因纽特人群体中持久性有机污染物(POPs)的浓度有所下降。本研究的主要目的是开发一种方法,以量化代际饮食转变对人类在北极环境中暴露于有机污染物的潜在影响,以 PCB-153 作为案例研究。使用链接的化学命运和生物累积模型,使用现实的排放估算进行了长期(1930-2050 年)动态模拟。假设五种不同比例的传统和进口食品的饮食,随着时间的推移计算女性体内负荷,然后用于说明社区/人群水平的潜在变异性。在任何给定的时间点,食用 100%传统饮食(即大量摄入环斑海豹的鲸脂)的个体的模型体负荷大约比食用 100%进口食品饮食的个体高 15-150 倍。食用当地捕捞的鱼类(如北极鳕鱼)和海豹肉也与相对较低的体负荷有关。预计排放量的减少将使 30 岁女性的 PCB-153 体负荷从 1980 年到 2020 年降低 6 到 13 倍,而饮食转变则额外增加了 2 到 50 倍(即总共降低 12 到 650 倍),具体取决于饮食转变的类型和进口食品的来源。模型结果表明,饮食转变是亚种群内和之间变异性的一个重要因素,除了部分解释观察到的时间趋势外。在解释生物监测数据时,有关饮食转变的性质和时间的具体信息非常有价值。