“…The so-called penta-mixes consisting mainly of congeners 99 (2,2',4,4',5-penta-BDE) and 47 (2,2',4,4'-Tetra-BDE) with smaller amounts of penta-BDE 100, hexaBDEs 153 and 154 and Penta-BDE 85 were the most commonly used until they were banned in the EU under the recast Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive (RoHS, 2002/95/EC). Due to their high Log K ow s (6.57 for penta-BDE, 8.35-8.9 for octa, and 9.97 for deca), very little is found dissolved in water with the majority being bound to the organic fraction of suspended and bed-sediments, or the lipid in aquatic organisms (Tlili et al, 2012;Wenning et al, 2011). Airborne particle transport is believed to be responsible for PBDEs being found in ice cores as far away as the arctic circle from the 1970's onward (Hermanson et al, 2010), but compared to HCB there is a much greater geographical variation of atmospheric concentrations with the UK being a European hotspot in samples from 2002, which was believed to be related to their high production and use there (Jaward et al, 2004) and in a survey of eels across Europe the UK sample also had the highest PBDE concentrations (Santillo et al, 2005).…”