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Impacts potentiels de la pollution par l'ozone sur le rendement du blé en Ile-de-France: Analyse de la variabilité spatio-temporelle
2003
Castell, J.F. | Lebard, Stéphanie
Seasonal variability of leaf water capacity and wettability under the influence of pollution in different city zones
Anna Klamerus-Iwan | Ewa Błońska | Jarosław Lasota | Piotr Waligórski | Agnieszka Kalandyk
Can dust and tarry substances that are rich in polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which are deposited on leaves, cause changes in the water retention of tree crowns? It is hypothesized that the contact angle between droplets and a leaf's surface and water capacity changes because of the content of PAHs. This angle is treated as a bioindicator of environmental pollution. The goal of this study was to analyse the relationship between rainfall water capacity and wettability of small-leaved lime and poplar in different zones in a city centre during the period from April through November. We implemented a series of simulated rainfall and angle measurements under laboratory conditions of tree twigs collected at three locations inside the city centre and one from an area outside the city. The background for the water capacity values were results acquired from selected PAHs contents determined in leaves using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and images of the leaves' surface were acquired via Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM). Based on the obtained results, we concluded that there were significant differences in water capacity between the areas for each month. In the city centre, water capacity from April to July was lower than that in the forested area. From July to the end of the growing season, the water capacity was lower in the city compared to the forest area. The contact angle was strongly correlated with water capacity. With a decreasing contact angle, the raindrops increasingly adhered to the leaf surface, and water capacity increased. It was found that the effects of pollution on water capacity cannot be ignored in developing forecasts or in models describing ecosystem and hydrological changes in natural and urbanized environments. | Contact angle, Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), SEM, Water balance | 20 | 455-463 | 3
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Clean water, sanitation and under-five children diarrhea incidence: Empirical evidence from the South Africa’s General Household Survey
2021
Omotayo, Abiodun Olusola | Olagunju, Kehinde Oluseyi | Omotoso, Abeeb Babatunde | Ogunniyi, Adebayo | Otekunrin, Olutosin Ademola | Daud, Adebola Saidat
Life starts with plastic: High occurrence of plastic pieces in fledglings of northern fulmars | Life starts with plastic: High occurrence of plastic pieces in fledglings of northern fulmars
2024
Collard, France | Benjaminsen, Stine Charlotte | Herzke, Dorte | Husabø, Eirin | Sagerup, Kjetil | Tulatz, Felix | Gabrielsen, Geir W.
Plastic pollution threatens many organisms around the world. In particular, the northern fulmar, Fulmarus glacialis, is known to ingest high quantities of plastics. Since data are sparse in the Eurasian Arctic, we investigated plastic burdens in the stomachs of fulmar fledglings from Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. Fifteen birds were collected and only particles larger than 1 mm were extracted, characterised and analysed with Fourier Transform InfraRed spectroscopy. All birds ingested plastic. In total, 683 plastic particles were found, with an average of 46 ± 40 SD items per bird. The most common shape, colour and polymer were hard fragment, white, and polyethylene, respectively. Microplastics ( 5 mm). This study confirms high numbers of ingested plastics in fulmar fledglings from Svalbard and suggests that fulmar fledglings may be suitable for temporal monitoring of plastic pollution, avoiding potential biases caused by age composition or breeding state. | publishedVersion
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Evaluation of meso- and microplastic ingestion by the northern fulmar through a non-lethal sampling method | Evaluation of meso- and microplastic ingestion by the northern fulmar through a non-lethal sampling method
2023
Collard, France | Strøm, Hallvard | Fayet, Marie-Océane | Gudmundsson, Fannar Theyr | Herzke, Dorte | Hotvedt, Ådne | Løchen, Arja Katrina Lea Arnesen | Malherbe, Cédric | Eppe, Gauthier | Gabrielsen, Geir W.
An increasing number of organisms from the polar regions are reported contaminated by plastic. Rarely a non-killing sampling method is used. In this study we wanted to assess plastic levels using stomach flushing and evaluate the method suitability for further research and monitoring. The stomach of 22 fulmars from Bjørnøya, Svalbard, were flushed with water in the field. On return to the laboratory, the regurgitated content was digested using potassium hydroxide. The extracted plastics were visually characterised and analysed with spectroscopy. Only three birds had plastics in their stomach, totaling 36 particles, most of them microplastics (< 5 mm). The plastic burdens are much lower than previously reported in Svalbard. The stomach flushing is assumed not to allow the collection of the gizzard content. This is a major limitation as most of the plastics accumulate in the fulmar's gizzard. However, the method is still useful for studies investigating plastic ingestion dynamics, allowing to sample the same individuals over time. | publishedVersion
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Natural stress vs. anthropogenic pressure. How do they affect benthic communities?
2022
Puente Trueba, Maria Araceli | García Gómez, Andrés | De los Ríos Gutiérrez, Ana | Galván Arbeiza, Cristina | Universidad de Cantabria
This study compares the role of salinity regime and chemical pollution in the biodiversity patterns of estuarine benthic communities. A specific field survey allowed us to explain the response of organisms to mixtures of chemicals and the effects of salinity regime and extreme events on the richness and composition of macroinvertebrate assemblages. The patterns obtained provide further evidence that both stress sources are key factors in macroinvertebrate communities' organization, but the type and magnitude of the changes differ. The abundance of opportunistic species increased according to the pollution gradient, while this indicator was less sensitive to salinity descriptors. In contrast, biotic indices responded to the salinity regime but did not show a consistent pattern in response to pollutants. Multivariate analyses reflected both environmental stress gradients. Overall, the results suggested that diversity increased in the habitats where the frequency and duration of extreme drought and flood events were low. | This research was part of the PREVEMAR project (BIA2015-67298-R) and ECOTOPO project (RTI2018-096409-B-I00) funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the National Plan for Scientific Research. The authors want to specially thank the Port Authority of Santander for the information provided.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]The role of seagrass meadows in the coastal trapping of litter.
2022
Navarrete Fernández, Teresa Magdalena | Bermejo Lacida, Ricardo | Hernández Carrero, Ignacio | Deidun, A. | Andreu-Cazenave, M. | Cózar Cabañas, Andrés | Biología
The accelerated discard and mismanagement of human-made products are resulting in the continued input of litter into the oceans. Models and field observations show how floating litter can accumulate in remote areas throughout the global ocean, but far less is known about the non-floating litter fraction. Seagrass meadows play an important role in the sediment and natural-debris dynamics, and likely also in the storage and processing of non-floating litter. In this work, non-floating litter was studied across six Posidonia oceanica meadows. Litter accumulated mainly around the landside edge of the meadow. The outer margin of the edge predominantly trapped macro-litter, whilst microplastics accumulated mainly along the inner margin. On average, macro-litter concentrations increased 3-fold after heavy rainfall. Retention of non-floating litter by coastal meadows facilitates the recurrent landward-seaward conveyance of the easily-transportable litter (mainly plastic items) and its fragmentation before it is buried or transferred to deeper areas. | This work was supported by Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness of the Government of Spain (‘MIDaS’ CTM2016-77106-R, 2016); University of Cadiz (FPUCA2018, Support for university professors training for doctoral students at the University of Cadiz); CEIMAR Foundation, C´adiz (Grant for international mobility of doctoral students for development of thesis in co-tutelage regime, 2019); ‘Diputaci´on de C´adiz’ and SEA-EU (Beca Talento, 2021).
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Fate of microplastics in agricultural soils amended with sewage sludge: Is surface water runoff a relevant environmental pathway?
2022
Schell, Theresa | Hurley, Rachel | Buenaventura, Nina Tuscano | Mauri, Pedro V. | Nizzetto, Luca | Rico, Andreu | Vighi, Marco
Embargo until November 18, 2023 | Sewage sludge used as agricultural fertilizer has been identified as an important source of microplastics (MPs) to the environment. However, the fate of MPs added to agricultural soils is largely unknown. This study investigated the fate of MPs in agricultural soils amended with sewage sludge and the role of surface water runoff as a mechanism driving their transfer to aquatic ecosystems. This was assessed using three experimental plots located in a semi-arid area of Central Spain, which were planted with barley. The experimental plots received the following treatments: (1) control or no sludge application; (2) historical sludge application, five years prior to the experiment; and (3) sludge application at the beginning of the experiment. MPs were analyzed in surface water runoff and in different soil layers to investigate transport and infiltration for one year. The sewage sludge used in our experiment contained 5972–7771 MPs/kg dw. Based on this, we estimated that about 16,000 MPs were added to the agricultural plot amended with sludge. As expected, the sludge application significantly increased the MP concentration in soils. The control plot contained low MP concentrations (31–120 MPs kg−1 dw), potentially originating from atmospheric deposition. The plot treated five years prior to the experiment contained 226–412 and 177–235 MPs kg−1 dw at the start and end of the experiment, respectively; while the recently treated plot contained 182–231 and 138–288 MPs kg−1 dw. Our study shows that MP concentrations remain relatively constant in agricultural soils and that the MP infiltration capacity is very low. Surface water runoff had a negligible influence on the export of MPs from agricultural soils, mobilizing only 0.2–0.4% of the MPs added with sludge. We conclude that, in semi-arid regions, agricultural soils can be considered as long-term accumulators of MPs. | publishedVersion
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]The fate of conventional and potentially degradable gillnets in a seawater-sediment system
2022
Brakstad, Odd Gunnar | Sørensen, Lisbet | Hakvåg, Sigrid | Føre, Heidi Moe | Su, Biao | Aas, Marianne | Ribicic, Deni | Grimaldo, Eduardo
Abandoned gillnets in the marine environment represent a global environmental risk due to the ghost fishing caused by the nets. Degradation of conventional nylon gillnets was compared to that of nets made of poly- butylene succinate co-adipate-co-terephthalate (PBSAT) that are designed to degrade more readily in the envi- ronment. Gillnet filaments were incubated in microcosms of natural seawater (SW) and marine sediments at 20 ◦C over a period of 36 months. Tensile strength tests and scanning electron microscopy analyses showed weakening and degradation of the PBSAT filaments over time, while nylon filaments remained unchanged. Pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry revealed potential PBSAT degradation products associated with the filament surfaces, while nylon degradation products were not detected by these analyses. Microbial communities differed significantly between the biofilms on the nylon and PBSAT filaments. The slow deterio- ration of the PBSAT gillnet filaments shown here may be beneficial and reduce the ghost fishing periods of these gillnets. | publishedVersion
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Small Arctic rivers transport legacy contaminants from thawing catchments to coastal areas in Kongsfjorden, Svalbard
2022
Mcgovern, Maeve | Borgå, Katrine | Heimstad, Eldbjørg Sofie | Ruus, Anders | Christensen, Guttorm | Evenset, Anita
Decades of atmospheric and oceanic long-range transport from lower latitudes have resulted in deposition and storage of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in Arctic regions. With increased temperatures, melting glaciers and thawing permafrost may serve as a secondary source of these stored POPs to freshwater and marine ecosystems. Here, we present concentrations and composition of legacy POPs in glacier- and permafrost-influenced rivers and coastal waters in the high Arctic Svalbard fjord Kongsfjorden. Targeted contaminants include polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), hexachlorobenzene (HCB), dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethanes (DDTs), hexachlorocyclohexanes (HCHs) and chlordane pesticides. Dissolved (defined as fraction filtered through 0.7 μm GF/F filter) and particulate samples were collected from rivers and near-shore fjord stations along a gradient from the heavily glaciated inner fjord to the tundra-dominated catchments at the outer fjord. There were no differences in contaminant concentration or pattern between glacier and tundra-dominated catchments, and the general contaminant pattern reflected snow melt with some evidence of pesticides released with glacial meltwater. Rivers were a small source of chlordane pesticides, DDTs and particulate HCB to the marine system and the particle-rich glacial meltwater contained higher concentrations of particle associated contaminants compared to the fjord. This study provides rare insight into the role of small Arctic rivers in transporting legacy contaminants from thawing catchments to coastal areas. Results indicate that the spring thaw is a source of contaminants to Kongsfjorden, and that expected increases in runoff on Svalbard and elsewhere in the Arctic could have implications for the contamination of Arctic coastal food-webs. | publishedVersion
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