Title of article :
Revisiting the organohalogens associated with 1979-samples of
Brazilian bees (Eufriesea purpurata)
Author/Authors :
Walter Vetter، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Donald Roberts، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Brazilian bees of the species Eufriesea purpurata are known to tolerate very high concentrations of DDT. As reported in the
literature, these bees have suffered no harm from as much as 2 mg/bee, which is in the per-cent range of the body weight. In 1979,
individuals of E. purpurata were captured as they collected DDT from walls of remote, rural houses in Brazil. Reported herein are
quantities and identities of DDT, DDT metabolites, and other organohalogen compounds in four samples of bees stored since 1979.
The concentrations of DDT (sum of p,p′-DDT, -DDE, and -DDD) ranged from 23 to 314 μg/bee which is up to twelve fold higher
than the LD50 value of DDT in the honey bee (Apis mellifera) but significantly lower than the no-effect concentration in E.
purpurata. Enantioselective determination confirmed the presence of racemic o,p′-DDT in the four individual samples. GC/ECNIMS
investigation resulted in the detection of low amounts (<1 μg/bee) of PCA, lindane, and chlordane. At higher retention times
four unknown compounds were detected with a proposed molecular ion at m/z 498, a non-aromatic hydrocarbon backbone along
with the presence of eight chlorine substituents. Neither the structure nor the origin of these compounds could be determined.
Considering where and when the bees were collected and considering the biology and ecology of the euglossine bees themselves,
we propose that the four unknowns are natural products and, as such, are the most highly chlorinated natural compounds yet
discovered.
Keywords :
Persistent Organic Pollutants , Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane , Bees , Halogenated natural products
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment