Legacy and emerging organophosphorus flame retardants and plasticizers in frogs: Sex difference and parental transfer
2020
Liu, Yin-E | Luo, Xiao-Jun | Guan, Ke-Lan | Huang, Chen-Chen | Zhu, Chun-You | Qi, Xue-Meng | Zeng, Yan-Hong | Mai, Bi-Xian
Black-spotted frogs and bullfrogs from an e-waste polluted area were collected and examined for legacy and emerging organophosphorus flame retardants (PFRs) and plasticizers. Total concentrations of PFRs and plasticizers were 0.62–15 ng/g wet weight (ww) and 316–4904 ng/g ww in muscles, 2.2–59 ng/g ww and 127–5757 ng/g ww in eggs and gonads, and 1.2–15 ng/g ww and 51–1510 ng/g ww in oviducts, respectively. For muscle tissues, concentrations of ∑PFRs, triethyl phosphate, tris-(2-chloroethyl) phosphate, and tris-(chloro-2-propyl) phosphate were significantly higher in the males than females (p < 0.05). However, for reproductive tissues, eggs exhibited higher levels of those contaminants than gonads (p < 0.05). No significant sex difference in levels of plasticizers was observed in muscles. In contrast, levels for (2-ethylhexyl) phthalate, di-n-butyl phthalate, and di-iso-butyl phthalate in gonads were significantly higher than those in eggs (p < 0.05). Significantly negative linear correlations between maternal transfer ratios and log KOW were found in female frogs. Paternal transfer potentials were first significantly and positively correlated to log KOW (<6) and then decreased afterward in the males. These results indicated that parental transfer was answer for the sex-specific accumulation of PFRs and plasticizers in frogs.
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