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Found 9983 publications. Showing page 117 of 400:

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Is crumb rubber a source for pollutants and harmful effects in the marine environment?

Halsband-Lenk, Claudia; Herzke, Dorte; Sørensen, Lisbet; Booth, Andy

In Norwegian coastal communities, rubber microplastic granules (≤ 5 mm in size) derived from discarded vehicle tires are used in large quantities on outdoor synthetic turf sports pitches. Through transport by waste water effluents and terrestrial runoff, these rubber particles are considered a significant source of MPs to the marine ecosystem. In the here presented interdisciplinary project we study the composition, degradation and environmental impacts of these rubber granules from locations in northern Norway and Svalbard. Their persistence and residence time in the Arctic marine environment is unknown. These rubber particles pose a potential health risk for arctic wild life through direct ingestion, especially at the base of the marine food chain, but may also provide an exposure route for toxic additive chemicals present in tires to marine organisms. Furthermore, the rubber particles may act as a vector for other persistent organic and heavy metal pollutants already present in the marine environment. Arctic marine environments present special abiotic conditions for the degradation of these particles, with cold water temperatures and long periods with unlimited sunlight. During a 12 months period, rubber crumbs were placed out in the ocean in stainless steel containers and sub-sampled continuously for the measurement of persistent organic pollutants, metals and additives. Hydrophobic persistent organic pollutants such as PAHs, PCBs, DDTs, bisphenols, as well as metals were measured to establish the adsorption and leaching kinetics in seawater under in situ conditions. Samples were extracted using ultrasound and nonpolar solvents, followed by GPC and SPE clean up. Chemical analyses using pyroGC/MS, GC/MS/MS and LC/HRMS were done in the laboratories of NILU, Tromsø and SINTEF, Trondheim. Exposure experiments with rubber leachate were also conducted and high mortality rates were found for different marine zooplankton species.

2018

CSF sodium at toxic levels precedes delirium in hip fracture patients

Hassel, Bjørnar; Mariussen, Espen; Idland, Ane-Victoria; Dahl, Gry Torsæter; Ræder, Johan; Frihagen, Frede Jon; Berg, Jens Petter; Chaudhry, Farrukh Abbas; Wyller, Torgeir Bruun; Watne, Leiv

2018

Nanomaterials in medicine

Dusinska, Maria

2018

Performance comparison of the MODIS and the VIIRS 1.38 μm cirrus cloud channels using libRadtran and CALIOP data

Xia, Lang; Zhao, Fen; Chen, Liping; Zhang, Ruirui; Mao, Kebiao; Kylling, Arve; Ma, Ying

2018

Strongly coupled data assimilation (SCDA) of SMOS land surface brightness temperature in WRF using the EnKF

Blyverket, Jostein; Bertino, Laurent; Hamer, Paul David; Svendby, Tove Marit; Lahoz, William A.

2018

Assimilation of SMOS Level 2 soil moisture retrievals for improved soil moisture estimates over northern latitudes

Blyverket, Jostein; Bertino, Laurent; Hamer, Paul David; Svendby, Tove Marit; Lahoz, William A.

2018

Evaluation of global models abilities to assess the regional and global sulfate aerosol trends, 1990-2015

Aas, Wenche; Mortier, Augustin; Cherian, Ribu; Oliviè, Dirk Jan Leo; Faluvegi, Greg; Hand, Jenny; Lehmann, Christopher M. B.; Myhre, Cathrine Lund; Myhre, Gunnar; Sato, Keiichi; Schulz, Michael; Shindell, Drew; Takemura, Toshihiko; Tsyro, Svetlana; Quaas, Johannes

2018

Passive air sampling of POPs in background air along a European-Arctic transect

Halvorsen, Helene Lunder; Möckel, Claudia; Pedersen, Lovise Skogeng; Krogseth, Ingjerd Sunde; Bohlin-Nizzetto, Pernilla; Schlabach, Martin; Breivik, Knut

2018

The value of coastal lagoons: Case study of recreation at the Ria de Aveiro, Portugal in comparison to the Coorong, Australia

Clara, Inês; Dyack, Brenda; Rolfe, John; Newton, Alice; Borg, Darien; Povilanskas, Ramunas; Brito, Ana C.

2018

Genotoxicity of nanomaterials in advanced in vitro model systems

Dusinska, Maria; Elje, Elisabeth; Mariussen, Espen; Gutleb, A.; Serchi, T.; Rundén-Pran, Elise

2018

Human in vitro liver 3D spheroid model in nanotoxicology.

Elje, Elisabeth; Dusinska, Maria; Mariussen, Espen; Rundén-Pran, Elise

2018

Probing the Differential Tissue Distribution and Bioaccumulation Behavior of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances of Varying Chain-Lengths, Isomeric Structures and Functional Groups in Crucian Carp

Shi, Yali; Vestergren, Robin; Nøst, Therese Haugdahl; Zhou, Zhen; Cai, Yaqi

Understanding the bioaccumulation mechanisms of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) across different chain-lengths, isomers and functional groups represents a monumental scientific challenge with implications for chemical regulation. Here, we investigate how the differential tissue distribution and bioaccumulation behavior of 25 PFASs in crucian carp from two field sites impacted by point sources can provide information about the processes governing uptake, distribution and elimination of PFASs. Median tissue/blood ratios (TBRs) were consistently <1 for all PFASs and tissues except bile which displayed a distinct distribution pattern and enrichment of several perfluoroalkyl sulfonic acids. Transformation of concentration data into relative body burdens (RBBs) demonstrated that blood, gonads, and muscle together accounted for >90% of the amount of PFASs in the organism. Principal component analyses of TBRs and RBBs showed that the functional group was a relatively more important predictor of internal distribution than chain-length for PFASs. Whole body bioaccumulation factors (BAFs) for short-chain PFASs deviated from the positive relationship with hydrophobicity observed for longer-chain homologues. Overall, our results suggest that TBR, RBB, and BAF patterns were most consistent with protein binding mechanisms although partitioning to phospholipids may contribute to the accumulation of long-chain PFASs in specific tissues.

2018

Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report: Present-day ozone distribution and trends relevant to human health

Fleming, Zoë L.; Doherty, Ruth M.; Schneidemesser, Erika von; Malley, Christopher S.; Cooper, Owen R.; Pinto, Joseph P.; Colette, Augustin; Xu, Xiaobin; Simpson, David; Schultz, Martin G.; Lefohn, Allen S.; Hamad, Samera; Moolla, Raeesa; Solberg, Sverre; Feng, Zhaozhong

This study quantifies the present-day global and regional distributions (2010–2014) and trends (2000–2014) for five ozone metrics relevant for short-term and long-term human exposure. These metrics, calculated by the Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report, are: 4th highest daily maximum 8-hour ozone (4MDA8); number of days with MDA8 > 70 ppb (NDGT70), SOMO35 (annual Sum of Ozone Means Over 35 ppb) and two seasonally averaged metrics (3MMDA1; AVGMDA8). These metrics were explored at ozone monitoring sites worldwide, which were classified as urban or non-urban based on population and nighttime lights data.

Present-day distributions of 4MDA8 and NDGT70, determined predominantly by peak values, are similar with highest levels in western North America, southern Europe and East Asia. For the other three metrics, distributions are similar with North–South gradients more prominent across Europe and Japan. Between 2000 and 2014, significant negative trends in 4MDA8 and NDGT70 occur at most US and some European sites. In contrast, significant positive trends are found at many sites in South Korea and Hong Kong, with mixed trends across Japan. The other three metrics have similar, negative trends for many non-urban North American and some European and Japanese sites, and positive trends across much of East Asia. Globally, metrics at many sites exhibit non-significant trends. At 59% of all sites there is a common direction and significance in the trend across all five metrics, whilst 4MDA8 and NDGT70 have a common trend at ~80% of all sites. Sensitivity analysis shows AVGMDA8 trends differ with averaging period (warm season or annual). Trends are unchanged at many sites when a 1995–2014 period is used; although fewer sites exhibit non-significant trends. Over the longer period 1970–2014, most Japanese sites exhibit positive 4MDA8/SOMO35 trends. Insufficient data exist to characterize ozone trends for the rest of Asia and other world regions.

2018

Modification of local urban aerosol properties by long-range transport of biomass burning aerosol

Stachlewska, Iwona S.; Samson, Mateusz; Zawadzka, Olga; Harenda, Kamila M.; Janicka, Lucja; Poczta, Patryk; Szczepanik, Dominika; Heese, Birgit; Wang, Dongxiang; Borek, Karolina; Tetoni, Eleni; Proestakis, Emmanouil; Siomos, Nikolaos; Nemuc, Anca; Chojnicki, Bogdan H.; Markowicz, Krzysztof M.; Pietruczuk, Aleksander; Szkop, Artur; Althausen, Dietrich; Stebel, Kerstin; Schuettemeyer, Dirk; Zehner, Claus

During August 2016, a quasi-stationary high-pressure system spreading over Central and North-Eastern Europe, caused weather conditions that allowed for 24/7 observations of aerosol optical properties by using a complex multi-wavelength PollyXT lidar system with Raman, polarization and water vapour capabilities, based at the European Aerosol Research Lidar Network (EARLINET network) urban site in Warsaw, Poland. During 24–30 August 2016, the lidar-derived products (boundary layer height, aerosol optical depth, Ångström exponent, lidar ratio, depolarization ratio) were analysed in terms of air mass transport (HYSPLIT model), aerosol load (CAMS data) and type (NAAPS model) and confronted with active and passive remote sensing at the ground level (PolandAOD, AERONET, WIOS-AQ networks) and aboard satellites (SEVIRI, MODIS, CATS sensors). Optical properties for less than a day-old fresh biomass burning aerosol, advected into Warsaw’s boundary layer from over Ukraine, were compared with the properties of long-range transported 3–5 day-old aged biomass burning aerosol detected in the free troposphere over Warsaw. Analyses of temporal changes of aerosol properties within the boundary layer, revealed an increase of aerosol optical depth and Ångström exponent accompanied by an increase of surface PM10 and PM2.5. Intrusions of advected biomass burning particles into the urban boundary layer seem to affect not only the optical properties observed but also the top height of the boundary layer, by moderating its increase.

2018

Crumb rubber in sports fields - Advances in environmental chemistry

Herzke, Dorte; Halsband-Lenk, Claudia; Sørensen, Lisbet; Booth, Andy

2018

Microwave satellite remote sensing of soil moisture

Blyverket, Jostein; Hamer, Paul; Lahoz, William A.

2018

Satellite based Monitoring Initiative for Regional Air quality (SAMIRA)

Stebel, Kerstin; Schneider, Philipp; Atjai, N.; Stefanie, H.; Botezan, C.; Diamandi, A.; Dumitrache, R.; Horálek, J.; Doubalova, J.; Juras, R.; Benesova, N.; Vlcek, O.; Nemuc, A.; Nicolae, D.; Nicolae, V.; Boldeanu, M.; Stachlewska, I.; Zawadska, O.; Novotny, P.; Vanek, L.; Zehner, C.

2018

Towards creating a ESA CCI Level 4 root zone soil moisture product using land surface data assimilation

Blyverket, Jostein; Lahoz, William A.; Hamer, Paul; Bertino, Laurent

2018

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