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Resultados 641-650 de 1,506
Occurrence of selected estrogens in mangrove sediments
2012
Froehner, Sandro | Machado, Karina Scurupa | Stefan, Elisa | Bleninger, Tobias | da Rosa, Edson Cordova | de Castro Martins, César
This paper presents results related to the occurrence and distribution of estrogens along the Brazilian coast. Three mangrove areas were chosen to evaluate the presence of estrogens in surface sediments of mangrove forests. The presence of estrogens was observed in all studied sites. 17-α-Ethinylestradiol (EE2), a synthetic estrogen, was the most common and has been found in higher concentration (0.45–129.78ng/g) compared to 17-β-estradiol (E1) and estrone (E2) (both being natural estrogens). The concentrations of E1 and E2 ranged from 0.02 to 49.27ng/g and 0.03 to 39.77ng/g, respectively. Theoretically, under anaerobic conditions EE2 can be reduced to E1 even in environments such as sediments of mangrove forests, which are essentially anaerobic. Even if the concentrations of estrogens seem to be insignificant in some samples, the effects remain uncertain.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Water characterization in three industrialized harbours (Vigo, Bilbao and Pasajes) in North Coast of Spain
2012
Durán, Iria | Nieto, Oscar
Total dissolved Cu, Zn, Pb and Cd concentrations, speciation, fluorescence of organic matter and toxicity for sea urchin development have been studied during three years in water samples of three of the most industrialized harbours in North Coast of Spain: Vigo, Bilbao and Pasajes. Total metal concentrations were below 0.4nM for Cd and generally below 2nM for Pb. Zn and Cu levels were higher (2.8–9nM Cu and 15–234nM Zn) and denoted an anthropogenic enrichment. Ligand concentrations were usually between 50 and 200nM for Cu and between 6 and 80 for Pb and Zn. Organic matter and speciation analysis yielded complementary information to characterize the samples, but no correlation was present between the parameters calculated by both methods. Samples were tested for toxicity with sea urchin embryo bioassay and three samples were toxic but the toxicity could not be explained with the metal levels here measured.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Neustonic microplastic and zooplankton in the North Western Mediterranean Sea
2012
Collignon, Amandine | Hecq, Jean-Henri | Glagani, François | Voisin, Pierre | Collard, France | Goffart, Anne
Neustonic microplastic and zooplankton abundance was determined in the North Western Mediterranean Sea during a summer cruise between July 9th and August 6th 2010, with a break between July 22th and 25th due to a strong wind event. Ninety percent of the 40 stations contained microplastic particles (size 0.3–5mm) of various compositions: e.g., filaments, polystyrene, thin plastic films. An average concentration of 0.116particles/m² was observed. The highest abundances (>0.36particles/m²) were observed in shelf stations. The neustonic plastic particles concentrations were 5 times higher before than after the strong wind event which increased the mixing and the vertical repartition of plastic particles in the upper layers of the water column. The values rise in the same order of magnitude than in the North Pacific Gyre. The average ratio between microplastics and mesozooplankton weights was 0.5 for the whole survey and might induce a potential confusion for zooplankton feeders.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Severe pollution of PCDD/Fs and dioxin-like PCBs in sediments from Lake Shihwa, Korea: Tracking the source
2012
Moon, Hyo-Bang | Choi, Minkyu | Choi, Hee-Gu | Kannan, Kurunthachalam
Concentrations of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins, dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) and dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (DL-PCBs) were determined in surface sediments from Lake Shihwa and from creeks that discharge into this artificial lake. The toxic equivalents (TEQs) in sediments ranged from 1.0 to 1770pg/g dry weight, which were some of the highest values ever reported so far for coastal sediments on a global basis. The concentrations of PCDD/Fs and DL-PCBs decreased with increasing distance from the creeks to offshore regions of the lake. Based on a multivariate statistical analysis and congener profiles, it was found that high contamination by PCDD/Fs in creek sediments collected around Lake Shihwa was associated with releases from chlor-alkali processes. Significant correlations were found for total organic carbon content and the concentrations of highly chlorinated PCDD/F congeners. This is the first report to document chlor-alkali processes as a significant source of PCDD/F contamination in Korean coastal waters.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Microbiological and physicochemical analysis of the coastal waters of southern Brazil
2012
Moresco, V. | Viancelli, A. | Nascimento, M.A. | Souza, D.S.M. | Ramos, A.P.D. | Garcia, L.A.T. | Simões, C.M.O. | Barardi, C.R.M.
The aim of this study was to assess the impact of sewage discharge on coastal waters by evaluating the influence of physicochemical parameters on the presence of enteric microorganisms in seawater samples collected from 11 beaches in Florianopolis, Santa Catarina, Brazil, over a one-year period (August 2009 to July 2010). Samples were assessed for the presence of human adenoviruses (HAdV), polyomavirus (JCPyV), hepatitis A virus (HAV), and noroviruses (HuNoV GI and GII). Escherichia coli and physicochemical parameters (salinity, temperature, pH and dissolved oxygen) were also evaluated. From the 132 samples analyzed, 55% were positive for HAdV, 51.5% for HAV, 7.5% for HuNoV GI, 4.5% for HuNoV GII, and 3% for JCPyV. E. coli levels ranged from 8 to 1325CFU/100mL at all sites. The overall results highlight the problem of sewage discharge into coastal waters and confirm that there is no correlation between viral presence and bacterial contamination.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]The effects of mariculture activities on the adsorption/desorption and chemical fractionations of mercury on sediments
2012
Liang, Peng | Wu, Sheng-Chun | Li, Yi-Chun | Li, Hong-Bo | Yu, Guang-bin | Yu, Shen | Wong, Ming H.
The aims of the present study were to investigate the effects of mariculture activities on inorganic mercury (Hg²⁺) adsorption/desorption on sediments and the distributions of newly adsorbed Hg²⁺ on different chemical fractionations. The adsorption amount and binding energy of Hg²⁺ on mariculture sediment (MS) were significantly higher (p<0.05) than reference sediment (RS). This may be explained by the strong complexation role that exists between Hg²⁺ and organic matter (OM), which derived from unconsumed fish feed and fish metabolites. The reducible Hg²⁺ in MS was significantly lower (p<0.01) than RS, which may have been caused by the decreasing amount of iron and manganese hydroxide in MS, lead to the decrease of Hg²⁺ bound to them. On the contrary, the residual Hg²⁺ was significantly higher (p<0.01) in MS than RS, which suggests that newly adsorbed Hg²⁺ was more stable in MS than RS.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Long term monitoring of photosystem II herbicides – Correlation with remotely sensed freshwater extent to monitor changes in the quality of water entering the Great Barrier Reef, Australia
2012
Kennedy, Karen | Schroeder, Thomas | Shaw, Melanie | Haynes, David | Lewis, Stephen | Bentley, Christie | Paxman, Chris | Carter, S. (Steve) | Brando, Vittorio E. | Bartkow, Michael | Hearn, Laurence | Mueller, Jochen F.
Photosystem II (PSII) herbicides are used in large quantities on agricultural lands adjoining the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Routine monitoring at 14 sites in inshore waters of the GBR using passive sampling techniques detected diuron (32–94% of sampling periods) at maximum concentrations of 1.7–430ngL⁻¹ in the relatively pristine Cape York Region to the Mackay Whitsunday Region, respectively. A PSII herbicide equivalent (PSII-HEq) index developed as an indicator for reporting was dominated by diuron (average contribution 89%) and typically increased during the wet season. The maximum PSII-HEq indicates the potential for photosynthetic inhibition of diatoms, seagrass and coral-symbionts. PSII herbicides were significantly positively correlated with remotely sensed coloured dissolved organic matter, a proxy for freshwater extent. Combining these methods provides for the first time the potential to cost-effectively monitor improvements in water quality entering the GBR with respect to exposure to PSII herbicides.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Symbiont-specific responses in foraminifera to the herbicide diuron
2012
van Dam, Joost W. | Negri, Andrew P. | Mueller, Jochen F. | Uthicke, Sven
The effects of the photosystem II (PSII) herbicide diuron was assessed on thirteen tropical foraminifera hosting diatom, dinoflagellate, red or green algae endosymbionts. Inhibition of photosynthesis (reduced ΔF/Fₘ ′) by diuron depended on both symbiont type and test ultrastructure, with greatest sensitivity observed for diatom- and chlorophyte-hosting species (24h IC₂₅ 2.5–4μgL⁻¹). Inhibition kinetics was slow (24–48h until maximum inhibition) in comparison with corals, suggesting structural differences may influence herbicide uptake and transport. Although foraminifera were generally less sensitive to direct effects of diuron (inhibition ΔF/Fₘ ′) than other marine phototrophs, damage to PSII (reduction Fᵥ/Fₘ) occurred at concentrations lower than observed for other organisms (24h IC₂₅ 3–12μgL⁻¹). Damage to PSII was highly light dependent and occurred at very low light intensities indicating limited photoprotective capacity. The high diversity, widespread occurrence and relative sensitivity make foraminifera good bioindicator organisms to evaluate phytotoxic stress on coral reefs.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]The influence of a season of extreme wet weather events on exposure of the World Heritage Area Great Barrier Reef to pesticides
2012
Kennedy, Karen | Devlin, Michelle | Bentley, Christie | Lee-Chue, Kristie | Paxman, Chris | Carter, S. (Steve) | Lewis, Stephen E. | Brodie, Jon | Guy, Ellia | Vardy, Suzanne | Martin, Katherine C. | Jones, Alison | Packett, Robert | Mueller, Jochen F.
The 2010–2011 wet season was one of extreme weather for the State of Queensland, Australia. Major rivers adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) were discharging at rates 1.5 to >3 times higher than their long term median. Exposure to photosystem II herbicides has been routinely monitored over a period of up to 5years at 12 inshore GBR sites. The influence of this wet season on exposure to photosystem II herbicides was examined in the context of this long-term monitoring record and during flood plume events in specific regions. Median exposures expressed as diuron equivalent concentration were an average factor of 2.3 times higher but mostly not significantly different (p<0.05) to the median for the long-term monitoring record. The herbicides metolachlor and tebuthiuron were frequently detected in flood plume waters at concentrations that reached or exceeded relevant water quality guidelines (by up to 4.5 times).
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Satellite imaging coral reef resilience at regional scale. A case-study from Saudi Arabia
2012
Rowlands, Gwilym | Purkis, Samuel J. | Riegl, Bernhard | Metsamaa, Liisa | Bruckner, Andrew | Renaud, Philip
We propose a framework for spatially estimating a proxy for coral reef resilience using remote sensing. Data spanning large areas of coral reef habitat were obtained using the commercial QuickBird satellite, and freely available imagery (NASA, Google Earth). Principles of coral reef ecology, field observation, and remote observations, were combined to devise mapped indices. These capture important and accessible components of coral reef resilience. Indices are divided between factors known to stress corals, and factors incorporating properties of the reef landscape that resist stress or promote coral growth. The first-basis for a remote sensed resilience index (RSRI), an estimate of expected reef resilience, is proposed. Developed for the Red Sea, the framework of our analysis is flexible and with minimal adaptation, could be extended to other reef regions. We aim to stimulate discussion as to use of remote sensing to do more than simply deliver habitat maps of coral reefs.
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