Although many studies have documented the wide occurrence of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in cetaceans, little evidence exists regarding the detrimental effects of PBDE exposure on calf death rates for freeranging cetaceans. This study analyzed life-history-associated PBDE bioaccumulation patterns in 128 stranding Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin (Sousa chinensis) samples over an 18-year timespan from the Pearl River Estuary (PRE). In comparison to the records of PBDE levels in cetaceans worldwide, the median levels of PBDEs (median = 10600 ng g −1 lw, range = 721−50900 ng g −1 lw) in all samples were the highest to date. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed that adult males (median = 16100 ng g −1 lw, range = 4070−50900 ng g −1 lw) and calves (12000 ng g −1 lw, range = 1250−35300 ng g −1 lw) both had the highest levels of PBDEs compared to the rest of the age/sex groups (p < 0.05). Concentrations of PBDEs in noncalves significantly decreased over the studied period, while those in calves had a slightly increasing trend, which may be due to different exposure routes via fish or milk, respectively. A significant and positive relationship was found between annual calf stranding death rates and body-length-adjusted PBDE concentrations in calves (r = 0.62, p < 0.05), suggesting that maternal exposure of calves to elevated levels of PBDEs may have contributed to the high annual stranding death rates of calves in the last two decades.
Marine mammals often accumulate high levels of environmental
contaminants,
even those that are globally regulated regarding usage, raising concerns
about their health status. Here, we conducted the first investigation
of tissue distribution, spatiotemporal trends, and potential risks
of six organotin compounds (OTs) in Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins
(n = 101) from the northern South China Sea during
2003–2021. We detected the highest level of hepatic triphenyltin
in these humpback dolphins compared with the results reported in cetaceans
globally, and the liver accumulated the highest OT concentrations
than other analyzed tissues. Despite the downward trend of butyltins
in humpback dolphins after the global ban on the use of OTs as antifouling
paints, levels of phenyltins have continued to increase over the past
20 years, suggesting that the other applications of phenyltins in
South China remain prevalent. In vitro and in vivo analyses revealed
that tissue-relevant doses of OTs could induce agonistic effects on
the dolphin peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ as
a master regulator of lipid homeostasis and altered the dolphin fatty
acid profiles. Our results highlight the lipid-disrupting effects
of current OT exposure in humpback dolphins and emphasize the need
for further efforts to eliminate OT contamination in South China.
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