Environmental Fate of Cl-PFPECAs: Accumulation of Novel and Legacy Perfluoroalkyl Compounds in Real-World Vegetation and Subsoils.
Mary J B DavisMarina G EvichSandra M GoodrowJohn W WashingtonPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2023)
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are globally distributed and potentially toxic compounds. We report accumulation of chloroperfluoropolyethercarboxylates (Cl-PFPECAs) and perfluorocarboxylates (PFCAs) in vegetation and subsoils in New Jersey. Lower molecular weight Cl-PFPECAs, containing 7-10 fluorinated carbons, and PFCAs containing 3-6 fluorinated carbons were enriched in vegetation relative to surface soils. Subsoils were dominated by lower molecular weight Cl-PFPECAs, a divergence from surface soils. Contrastingly, PFCA homologue profiles in subsoils were similar to surface soils, likely reflecting temporal-use patterns. Accumulation factors (AFs) for vegetation and subsoils decreased with increasing CF 2 , 6-13 for vegetation and 8-13 in subsoils. In vegetation, for PFCAs having CF 2 = 3-6, AFs diminished with increasing CF 2 as a more sensitive function than for longer chains. Considering that PFAS manufacturing has transitioned from long-chain chemistry to short-chain, this elevated vegetative accumulation of short-chain PFAS suggests the potential for unanticipated PFAS exposure levels globally in human and/or wildlife populations. This inverse relationship between AFs and CF 2 -count in terrestrial vegetation is opposite the positive relationship reported in aquatic vegetation suggesting aquatic food webs may be preferentially enriched in long-chain PFAS. AFs normalized to soil-water concentrations increased with chain length for CF 2 = 6-13 in vegetation but remained inversely related to chain length for CF 2 = 3-6, reflecting a fundamental change in vegetation affinity for short chains compared to long.