Maternal transfer of perfluoroalkyl substances in hooded seals
Date
2017Author
Gronnestad, Randi
Polder, Anuschka
Villanger, Gro D.
Kovacs, Kit M.
Lydersen, Christian
Metadata
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The role of milk in the transfer of perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) to offspring is not well known in wildlife. Eight PFASs
were quantified in plasma and milk in mother–pup pairs of hooded seals (Cystophora cristata) during the nursing period, and the role of
milk in the transfer process was analyzed. Hooded seal was chosen because of its short lactation period (3–4 d), during which the pup
feeds only on milk. Placental or lactation transfer would thus be the only source of PFAS in the pup. Of the 8 PFASs analyzed (S8PFAS),
7 were found in all samples; therefore, milk is a source to PFASs in pups. Perfluorooctane sulfonate was the dominant PFAS in all
samples. Mean S8PFAS concentrations were 6.0 ng/g protein (36 ng/g wet wt) in maternal plasma, 0.77 ng/g protein (3.2 ng/g wet wt) in
milk, and 12 ng/g protein (66 ng/g wet wt) in pup plasma. Measured concentrations in plasma were within ranges previously reported
from other seal species, below known toxicity thresholds for experimental rodents. Individual PFASs differed in transfer efficiency from
mother to pup, depending on carbon chain lengths, with the lowest relative transfer for the intermediate-chained PFASs (C9–C10). The
results show maternal transfer of PFASs via both milk and the placenta, of which placental transfer is the dominant pathway