High
mountains can trap semivolatile chemicals, such as persistent
organic pollutants (POPs), and hinder their dispersion. However, both
deep convection and mountain valleys can facilitate POPs’ transport
over mountains, which have not been investigated before. In this study,
a three-year sampling campaign along a south-north altitudinal transect
(100–5200m) across the central Himalayas, coupled with a multicompartment
contaminant fate model, was conducted for describing the transport
processes of POPs. The results show that POPs emitted in the lowlands
of the Himalayas can be transported to high altitudes and further
to the inner part of the Tibetan Plateau. Modeling suggests that more
than 90% of POPs are trapped along the way due to gaseous deposition
to soil/foliage and rainfall scavenging; while 2 × 10–3 to 1 × 10–1 Giga-grams/year of POPs are transported
across the Himalayas. The transport flux along valleys is 2–3
times higher than that across the mountain ridge. However, due to
the limited spatial coverage of mountain valleys, the amount of POPs
transported through valleys only accounts for a small part of the
total transport. This study shows that POPs can overcome the blocking
effect of the Himalayas, and high altitude transport across the mountain
ridge is the dominant transport pathway.
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