Difference between revisions of "Lindane"

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The use of HCH is generally prohibited in Western Europe and North America since 1979. The use of its main constituent, lindane has been phased out in Europe since 2002. Lindane is an insecticide which had a widespread use in agriculture and forestry, for seed treatment, in household biocidal products, as a textile preservative and as a wood preservative. Lindane has been intensively used for many years since 1949 but has been replaced in most applications. From an estimated use of nearly 7900 tonnes in 1970 in Europe, the use decreased to about 2300 tonnes in 1996.
 
The use of HCH is generally prohibited in Western Europe and North America since 1979. The use of its main constituent, lindane has been phased out in Europe since 2002. Lindane is an insecticide which had a widespread use in agriculture and forestry, for seed treatment, in household biocidal products, as a textile preservative and as a wood preservative. Lindane has been intensively used for many years since 1949 but has been replaced in most applications. From an estimated use of nearly 7900 tonnes in 1970 in Europe, the use decreased to about 2300 tonnes in 1996.
  
The global marine background concentration of lindane has been estimated to be 0,6 ng/l. Concentrations in the North Sea range from 0,3 to 8 ng/l (in the Dutch Wadden Sea). Concentrations of lindane in biota are thought to be decreasing. They have been as up to a few µg/kg [[wet weight]] in [[pollution and benthos|mussels]], 152 µg/kg [[wet weight]] in [[pollution and pelagic fishes|fish]], and 2-4 mg/kg [[lipid weight]] in the [[blubber ]] of [[pollution and marine mammals|marine mammals]].
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The global marine background concentration of lindane has been estimated to be 0,6 ng/l. Concentrations in the North Sea range from 0,3 to 8 ng/l (in the Dutch Wadden Sea). Concentrations of lindane in biota are thought to be decreasing. They have been as up to a few µg/kg [[wet weight]] in [[pollution and zoobenthos|mussels]], 152 µg/kg [[wet weight]] in [[pollution and pelagic fishes|fish]], and 2-4 mg/kg [[lipid weight]] in the [[blubber ]] of [[pollution and marine mammals|marine mammals]].
  
  

Revision as of 17:11, 5 August 2009

Definition of lindane:
Lindane is the common name for the γ-isomer of hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) and is used as an insecticide. [1]
This is the common definition for lindane, other definitions can be discussed in the article

Notes

The use of HCH is generally prohibited in Western Europe and North America since 1979. The use of its main constituent, lindane has been phased out in Europe since 2002. Lindane is an insecticide which had a widespread use in agriculture and forestry, for seed treatment, in household biocidal products, as a textile preservative and as a wood preservative. Lindane has been intensively used for many years since 1949 but has been replaced in most applications. From an estimated use of nearly 7900 tonnes in 1970 in Europe, the use decreased to about 2300 tonnes in 1996.

The global marine background concentration of lindane has been estimated to be 0,6 ng/l. Concentrations in the North Sea range from 0,3 to 8 ng/l (in the Dutch Wadden Sea). Concentrations of lindane in biota are thought to be decreasing. They have been as up to a few µg/kg wet weight in mussels, 152 µg/kg wet weight in fish, and 2-4 mg/kg lipid weight in the blubber of marine mammals.



Lindane is stable in fresh water as well as in seawater. It is removed through secondary mechanisms such as adsorption on sediment or via fish through the gills, the skin or ingestion. Degradation takes place much faster under anaerobic conditions than in the presence of oxygen. A limited degradability has been demonstrated and the occurrence in remote areas is due to long-range transport. Lindane occurs in different compartments and trophic levels of the Arctic and is accumulated by species at low trophic levels, while the biomagnification potential is low at the upper end of the food web. A number of ecotoxicity data for lindane are well within the range of OSPAR Ecotoxicological Assessment Criteria (0,5-5 μg/l), which are used for the identification of

areas of concern.