1 research outputs found
Elevated Accumulation of Parabens and their Metabolites in Marine Mammals from the United States Coastal Waters
The
widespread exposure of humans to parabens present in personal
care products is well-known. Nevertheless, little is known about the
accumulation of parabens in marine organisms. In this study, six parabens
and four common metabolites of parabens were measured in 121 tissue
samples from eight species of marine mammals collected along the coastal
waters of Florida, California, Washington, and Alaska. Methyl paraben
(MeP) was the predominant compound found in the majority of the marine
mammal tissues analyzed, and the highest concentration found was 865
ng/g (wet weight [wet wt]) in the livers of bottlenose dolphins from
Sarasota Bay, FL. 4-Hydroxybenzoic acid (4-HB) was the predominant
paraben metabolite found in all tissue samples. The measured concentrations
of 4-HB were on the order of hundreds to thousands of ng/g tissue,
and these values are some of the highest ever reported in the literature.
MeP and 4-HB concentrations showed a significant positive correlation
(<i>p</i> < 0.05), which suggested a common source of
exposure to these compounds in marine mammals. Trace concentrations
of MeP and 4-HB were found in the livers of polar bears from the Chuckchi
Sea and Beaufort Sea, which suggested widespread distribution of MeP
and 4-HB in the oceanic environment