Persistent organic contaminants, which are bioaccumulative and toxic are
a concern for the ecosystems and human health and are regulated under
international law (global and regional conventions, besides other). If
semivolatile, they cycle in different environmental compartments and
follow complex transport pathways. The ocean is believed to play a key
role in the cycling by accumulating and storing the contaminant and
providing a transport medium. But substance fate in the marine
environment is not fully understood yet. Here, the global
multicompartment chemistry-transport model MPI-MCTM is used to study the
fate of organic pollutants in the marine and total environment. For the
first time historical emission data are used in spatially-resolved
long-term simulations of an insecticide, DDT, and an industrial
chemical, perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA). The model results give new
insights into the cycling of these substances as different spatial and
process resolutions were tested. E.g. for DDT the model results show
saturation and reversal of air-sea exchange, which was not indicated by
any other study before.