Health hazard in the Baltic Sea: the presence and the effect of fluorinated substances on Baltic Sea organisms

Financiers

The Foundation for Baltic and East European Studies

Project type

Research

Abstract

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) is a collective name for approximatively 4700 synthetic chemicals used in a myriad of products, such as nonstick frying pans, waterproof clothing, cosmetics, electronics and firefighting foam. They are sometimes called “forever chemicals” as they break down very slowly, if at all, in the environment. They are found in indoor and outdoor environments, wildlife and in virtually every human tested. PFAS chemicals have been associated with cancer, developmental toxicity, and other negative health effects.

PFAS in the Baltic Sea

The widespread household use of products containing PFAS make sewage treatment plants (STPs) draining into in the Baltic Sea plausible point sources. Very little is known about the amounts and composition of PFAS coming from STPs as well as the effects of them on the organisms in the Baltic Sea. We believe that the PFAS currently monitored (commonly around 20 of almost 5000 substances) only comprise a small fraction of the total PFASs released. The disparity between the PFAS monitored and the PFAS used, suggests that the exposure to PFASs in the environment is largely underestimated. The aim of this three-year project is to measure the concentrations and composition of PFAS, in water, sediment and organisms in Baltic Sea food webs near STPs by combining methods of determining the different fractions of fluorine; known and unknown PFASs (i.e. fluorine mass balance, FMB). In addition, effects of developmental exposure from emerging and unstudied PFAS will be evaluated in experiments in two Baltic Sea organisms, the blue mussel (a mollusk) and the small crustaceans.

The novelty of the project lies in conducting FMB to address the problem that targeted analysis covers only a small fraction of the total 4700 compounds that are in commerce and that we will collect samples along 4 different transects that allows for replication and capturing inevitable spatial natural variability. We will use a wide suite of ecotoxicological endpoints for investigating health and occurrence of PFASs in wild-caught mussels and other marine organisms, and investigate sensitive endpoints (e.g., behavioral) in lab experiments. The communication plan for the results includes reports to policy and regulatory bodies that have the authority to use the data for policy purposes.

Tove Porseryd PhD, Södertörn University
Josefine Larsson PhD, Södertörn University
Patrik Dinnétz PhD, Södertörn University
Katarzyna Smolarz, Professor, University of Gdansk, Poland

Research area / geographic area

Natural Sciences, Technology and Environmental Studies Biology Environmental Science Environmental Studies Baltic Sea region and Eastern Europe Baltic

Contract ID

S2-20-0019

Project time

2021 — 2024

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Page updated

04-11-2024