خيارات البحث
النتائج 1 - 10 من 30
New DDT inputs after 30 years of prohibition in Spain. A case study in agricultural soils from south-western Spain
2011
Muñoz-Arnanz, Juan | Jiménez, Begoña
This study provides information on the current status of contamination by DDT in agricultural soils in south-western Spain. A recent use of technical DDT in at least 17% of the soils was found based on the values (<1) of the ratio [Formula: see text] . According to the ratio [Formula: see text] , a dicofol type contamination was detected in about 27% of the soils. A wide range of concentrations was observed (0.08–11.1 ng/g d.w.) regardless of the type of crop soil. Enantiomeric fractions (EFs), based on the chiral analysis of o,p′-DDT residues differed from the racemic value (0.500) in most soils but they were not correlated with the study variables [DDTs], SOM, [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] . Given the health risks posed by DDT, our findings support how the environmental control of legacy pollutants such as DDT cannot be neglected.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Pesticide pollution in agricultural areas of Northern Vietnam: Case study in Hoang Liet and Minh Dai communes
2011
Hoai, Pham Manh | Sebesvari, Zita | Minh, Tu Binh | Viet, Pham Hung | Renaud, Fabrice G.
Soils and agricultural products from the Red River basin in Northern Vietnam were reported to be contaminated by agrichemicals. To assess potential exposure of local farmers and consumers to these contaminants, pesticide use and management practices of local farmers were surveyed and residue concentrations were determined for recently used as well as for banned pesticides in water, soil, vegetables, and fish samples in two communes of Northern Vietnam. DDTs, HCHs, and Drin compounds still persist at relatively high concentrations in soil and occur in vegetable and fish samples. Recently used pesticides, such as fenobucarb, trichlorfon, cyfluthrin, and cypermethrin were detected in vegetable and fish samples. Thresholds for acceptable daily intake levels (ADI) were frequently reached in the analyzed food products pointing to the fact that current pesticide management practices do not only result in a pollution of the environment but also pose threats to human health.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]The use of environmental metabolomics to determine glyphosate level of exposure in rapeseed (Brassica napus L.) seedlings
2011
Petersen, Iben Lykke | Tomasi, Giorgio | Sørensen, H. (Hilmer) | Boll, Esther S. | Hansen, Hans Christian Bruun | Christensen, Jan H.
Metabolic profiling in plants can be used to differentiate between treatments and to search for biomarkers for exposure. A methodology for processing Ultra-High-Performance Liquid Chromatography–Diode-Array-Detection data is devised. This methodology includes a scheme for selecting informative wavelengths, baseline removal, retention time alignment, selection of relevant retention times, and principal component analysis (PCA). Plant crude extracts from rapeseed seedling exposed to sublethal concentrations of glyphosate are used as a study case. Through this approach, plants exposed to concentrations down to 5 μM could be distinguished from the controls. The compounds responsible for this differentiation were partially identified and were different from those specific for high exposure samples, which suggests that two different responses to glyphosate are elicited in rapeseed depending on the level of exposure. The PCA loadings indicate that a combination of other metabolites could be more sensitive than the response of shikimate to detect glyphosate exposure.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Anatomy of an urban waterbody: A case study of Boston’s Muddy River
2011
Mathew, Miriam | Yao, Yifu | Cao, Yixing | Shodhan, Khyati | Ghosh, Indrani | Bucci, Vanni | Leitao, Christopher | Njoka, Danson | Wei, Irvine | Hellweger, Ferdi L.
The objective of this study was to characterize and understand the water quality of Boston’s Muddy River prior to restoration, to help guide those activities and evaluate their success. We use a combination of monitoring, data analysis and mathematical modeling. The seasonal pattern of temperature, pollutant signatures (identified using a principal component analysis), correlations with precipitation and spatial patterns all point to a significant wastewater input at one of the outfalls and suggest significant receiving water impact. However, a quantitative analysis using a mathematical model (QUAL2K) suggests this source is not significant. Rather, internal loading from algae, sediment bed and waterfowl dominate the spatial pattern of water quality. These results suggest significant improvement can be expected from planned sediment dredging. The paper provides a case study of water quality assessment in the context of urban river restoration, and it illustrates the utility of combining monitoring and data analysis with modeling.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]A chemometric approach to the evaluation of atmospheric and fluvial pollutant inputs in aquatic systems: The Guadalquivir River estuary as a case study
2011
López-López, José A. | García-Vargas, Manuel | Moreno, Carlos
To establish the quality of waters it is necessary to identify both point and non-point pollution sources. In this work, we propose the combination of clean analytical methodologies and chemometric tools to study discrete and diffuse pollution caused in a river by tributaries and precipitations, respectively. During a two-year period, water samples were taken in the Guadalquivir river (selected as a case study) and its main tributaries before and after precipitations. Samples were characterized by analysing nutrients, pH, dissolved oxygen, total and volatile suspended solids, carbon species, and heavy metals. Results were used to estimate fluvial and atmospheric inputs and as tracers for anthropic activities. Multivariate analysis was used to estimate the background pollution, and to identify pollution inputs. Principal Component Analysis and Cluster Analysis were used as data exploratory tools, while box-whiskers plots and Linear Discriminant Analysis were used to analyse and distinguish the different types of water samples.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Sensitivity analysis for models of greenhouse gas emissions at farm level. Case study of N₂O emissions simulated by the CERES-EGC model
2011
Drouet, J.-L. | Capian, N. | Fiorelli, J.-L. | Blanfort, V. | Capitaine, M. | Duretz, S. | Gabrielle, B. | Martin, R. | Lardy, R. | Cellier, P. | Soussana, J.-F.
Modelling complex systems such as farms often requires quantification of a large number of input factors. Sensitivity analyses are useful to reduce the number of input factors that are required to be measured or estimated accurately. Three methods of sensitivity analysis (the Morris method, the rank regression and correlation method and the Extended Fourier Amplitude Sensitivity Test method) were compared in the case of the CERES-EGC model applied to crops of a dairy farm. The qualitative Morris method provided a screening of the input factors. The two other quantitative methods were used to investigate more thoroughly the effects of input factors on output variables. Despite differences in terms of concepts and assumptions, the three methods provided similar results. Among the 44 factors under study, N₂O emissions were mainly sensitive to the fraction of N₂O emitted during denitrification, the maximum rate of nitrification, the soil bulk density and the cropland area.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Carbon savings resulting from the cooling effect of green areas: A case study in Beijing
2011
Lin, Wenqi | Wu, Tinghai | Zhang, Chengguo | Yu, Ting
Green areas cool the climate of a city, reduce the energy consumption caused by the urban heat island (UHI) effect, and bring along carbon savings. However, the calculation of carbon savings due to the cooling effect of green areas is still not well understood. We have used a Landsat Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) image of Beijing, to identify the cooled areas, compute the possible energy used to maintain the temperature differences between cooled areas and their surrounding heated areas, and calculate the carbon savings owing to the avoidance of energy use. Results show that a total amount of 14315.37 tons carbon savings was achieved in the study area and the amount was related to the biomass, the size and the shape of green areas. These results demonstrate the importance of carbon savings resulting from green areas' cooling effect.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Do small marinas drive habitat specific impacts? A case study from Mediterranean Sea
2011
Di Franco, Antonio | Graziano, Mariagrazia | Franzitta, Giulio | Felline, Serena | Chemello, R. (Renato) | Milazzo, Marco
Many human activities add new structures to the marine landscape. Despite the fact that human structures cause some inevitable impacts, surprisingly little information exists on the effects of marina on natural marine assemblages. The aim of this paper is to assess habitat-specific response of benthic sessile organisms of rocky shores in relation to the presence of a small marina. Sampling was carried out at three coastal habitats (midshore, lowshore and subtidal) by means of visual censuses adopting an after-control-impact (ACI) experimental design. It appears that the marina affects the structure and composition of benthic communities of both the midshore and the lowshore. Little effect was evident on shallow subtidal assemblage structure. The results of the present study clearly show habitat-specific responses of coastal benthic assemblages to the presence of infrastructure.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Fish consumption and risk of contamination by mercury – Considerations on the definition of edible parts based on the case study of European sea bass
2011
Mieiro, C.L. | Pacheco, M. | Duarte, A.C. | Pereira, M.E.
In the present study, the risk to humans by consuming European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax), captured at three sites along a Hg contamination gradient, was evaluated by comparing muscle and kidney total Hg (T-Hg) levels with the European regulations for marketed fish. Moreover, T-Hg and organic Hg (O-Hg) levels in muscle were compared with the Provisional Tolerable Weekly Intake (PTWI) and the Reference Dose (RfD). Although T-Hg levels in muscle were below the European value allowable for marketed fish, kidney’s levels were higher than the set value, stressing the importance of redefining the concept of edible tissue and which tissues should be considered. Mercury weekly ingestion in the contaminated areas was higher than the PTWI, and O-Hg daily ingestion rates were higher than the RfD in all sampling sites. Thus, populations consuming sea bass from the contaminated sites may be at risk, with particular relevance for children and pregnant women.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]The impact of dredge-fill on Posidonia oceanica seagrass meadows: Regression and patterns of recovery
2011
Badalamenti, Fabio | Alagna, Adriana | D’Anna, Giovanni | Terlizzi, Antonio | Di Carlo, Giuseppe
Posidonia oceanica meadows can be severely damaged by dredge-fill operations. We report on the construction of gas pipelines that occurred between 1981 and 1993 in SW Sicily, Italy. A large portion of the meadow was mechanically removed, and the excavated trench was filled with a mosaic of substrates, ranging from sand to consolidated rock debris. Meadow loss and recovery were quantified over 7years after the end of operations. We recorded an overall loss of 81.20ha of meadow. Substrate strongly affected recovery as the percent cover by P. oceanica consistently increased on calcareous rubble, reaching values of 44.37±3.05% in shallow sites after 7years, whereas no significant increase occurred on other substrates. As in the Mediterranean Sea exploitation of coastal areas continues to grow with consequent impacts on P. oceanica meadows, this case study illustrates how artificial rubble-like materials could be employed to support the restoration of damaged meadows.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]