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Found 9759 publications. Showing page 266 of 391:

Publication  
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Organochlorines, perfluoroalkyl substances, mercury, and egg incubation temperature in an Arctic seabird: Insights from data loggers

Blévin, Pierre; Shaffer, Scott A.; Bustamante, Paco; Angelier, Frédéric; Picard, Baptiste; Herzke, Dorte; Moe, Børge; Gabrielsen, Geir W.; Bustnes, Jan Ove; Chastel, Olivier

In birds, incubation‐related behaviors and brood patch formation are influenced by hormonal regulation such as prolactin secretion. Brood patch provides efficient heat transfer between the incubating parent and the developing embryo in the egg. Importantly, several environmental contaminants are already known to have adverse effects on avian reproduction. However, relatively little is known about the effect of contaminants on incubation temperature (Tinc) in wild birds. By using temperature thermistors placed into artificial eggs, we investigated whether the most contaminated parent birds are less able to provide appropriate egg warming and thus less committed to incubating their clutch. Specifically, we investigated the relationships among 3 groups of contaminants (organochlorines, perfluoroalkyl substances [PFASs], and mercury [Hg]) with Tinc and also with prolactin concentrations and brood patch size in incubating Arctic black‐legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla). Our results reveal that among the organochlorines considered, only blood levels of oxychlordane, the main metabolite of chlordane, a banned pesticide, were negatively related to the minimum incubation temperature in male kittiwakes. Levels of PFASs and Hg were unrelated to Tinc in kittiwakes. Moreover, our study suggests a possible underlying mechanism: since we reported a significant and negative association between blood oxychlordane concentrations and the size of the brood patch in males. Finally, this reduced Tinc in the most oxychlordane‐contaminated kittiwakes was associated with a lower egg hatching probability.

Pergamon Press

2018

Organofluorine Contaminants (OFCs) in the Arctic and Northern European Atmosphere – a Current Overview

Hartz, William Frederik; Halvorsen, Helene Lunder; Nipen, Maja; Hermansen, Ove; Schmidbauer, Norbert; Hanssen, Linda; Nikiforov, Vladimir; Bohlin-Nizzetto, Pernilla

2024

Origin of elemental carbon in snow from western Siberia and northwestern European Russia during winter–spring 2014, 2015 and 2016

Evangeliou, Nikolaos; Shevchenko, Vladimir P.; Yttri, Karl Espen; Eckhardt, Sabine; Sollum, Espen; Pokrovsky, Oleg S.; Kobelev, Vasily O.; Korobov, Vladimir B.; Lobanov, Andrey A.; Starodymova, Dina P.; Vorobiev, Sergey N.; Thompson, Rona Louise; Stohl, Andreas

Short-lived climate forcers have been proven important both for the climate and human health. In particular, black carbon (BC) is an important climate forcer both as an aerosol and when deposited on snow and ice surface because of its strong light absorption. This paper presents measurements of elemental carbon (EC; a measurement-based definition of BC) in snow collected from western Siberia and northwestern European Russia during 2014, 2015 and 2016. The Russian Arctic is of great interest to the scientific community due to the large uncertainty of emission sources there. We have determined the major contributing sources of BC in snow in western Siberia and northwestern European Russia using a Lagrangian atmospheric transport model. For the first time, we use a recently developed feature that calculates deposition in backward (so-called retroplume) simulations allowing estimation of the specific locations of sources that contribute to the deposited mass.

EC concentrations in snow from western Siberia and northwestern European Russia were highly variable depending on the sampling location. Modelled BC and measured EC were moderately correlated (R = 0.53–0.83) and a systematic region-specific model underestimation was found. The model underestimated observations by 42 % (RMSE  =  49 ng g−1) in 2014, 48 % (RMSE  =  37 ng g−1) in 2015 and 27 % (RMSE  =  43 ng g−1) in 2016. For EC sampled in northwestern European Russia the underestimation by the model was smaller (fractional bias, FB  >  −100 %). In this region, the major sources were transportation activities and domestic combustion in Finland. When sampling shifted to western Siberia, the model underestimation was more significant (FB  <  −100 %). There, the sources included emissions from gas flaring as a major contributor to snow BC. The accuracy of the model calculations was also evaluated using two independent datasets of BC measurements in snow covering the entire Arctic. The model underestimated BC concentrations in snow especially for samples collected in springtime.

2018

Origin of the January - April 2004 increase in stratospheric NO2 observed in the northern polar latitudes.

Renard, J.B.; Blelly, P.L.; Bourgeois, Q.; Chartier, M.; Goutail, F.; Orsolini, Y.J.

2006

ORM (optimal removing of moisture from water damaged building constructions) - MVOCS.

Braathen, O.A.; Schmidbauer, N.; Lunder, C.; Blom, P.; Mattsson, J.

2002

Ormen Lange plant. Impact from emissions to air. Updating previous report. NILU OR

Mc Innes, H.; Knudsen, S.; Solberg, S.; Wathne, B.; Høgåsen, T.; Aarrestad, P.A.; Reitan, O.

2008

OS01-12 A computational toolbox supporting the development of Safe and Sustainable by Design chemicals and materials

Sarigiannis, D.; Nikiforou, F.; Karakoltzidis, Achilleas; Agalliadou, Anna; Rydberg, Tomas; Halling, Maja; Battistelli, Chiara L.; Benfenati, Emilio; Bossa, C.; Bouman, Evert Alwin; Bourgé, Émilien; Brouwer-Milovanovic, Milena; Hill, A.; Iacovidou, E.; Kanerva, T.; Kärnman, Therese; Leso, V.; Linden, J; Lofstedt, M.; Karakitsios, Spyros

Elsevier

2024

Oslo - Deterministic individual time-space modelling (Urban Exposure).

Fløisand, I.; Lützenkirchen, S.; Laupsa, H.; Bøhler, T.

2005

Oslo - Population-weighted outdoor concentrations (AirQUIS).

Slørdal, L.; Fløisand, I, Lützenkirchen, S.; Laupsa, H.; Bøhler, T.

2005

Oslo Citizens' Observatory. Results from the Oslo Empowerment Initiative as part of the CITI-SENSE project. NILU report

Castell, N.; Grossberndt, S.

The CITI-SENSE project has been created to develop Citizens' Observatories in different cities in Europe. By using a variety of low-cost sensors, citizens should be empowered to influence community policy and decision making in the area of air quality. In the framework of this project, we carried out different case studies (Empowerment Initiatives - EIs) in the fields of Urban Air Quality, Public Spaces and School Indoor Air Quality in the following nine cities: Barcelona (Spain), Belgrade (Serbia), Edinburgh (UK), Haifa (Israel), Oslo (Norway), Ostrava (Czech Republic), Ljubljana (Slovenia), Vienna (Austria) and Vitoria-Gasteiz (Spain).
This document reports the results from the activities within the Oslo Citizens' Observatory, carried out between December 2015 and September 2016. In this report, we present tools that have been used, results from collected data and measurements and the users¿ evaluation of the tools and the project activities in Oslo. We wrap up with some concluding remarks and the lessons learned for engaging the public in environmental monitoring.

2017

Oslo kommune brukte 39 mill. på å bli kvitt gamle vedovner. – Har hatt svært liten effekt, sier forsker.

Lopez-Aparicio, Susana; Grythe, Henrik (interview subjects); Pettrém, Maria; Johansen, Per Anders (journalists)

2020

Oslo-lufta. Powerpoint presentasjon. NILU F

Slørdal, L.H.

2003

Oslolufta er blitt mye bedre

Tønnesen, Dag (interview subject)

2019

Oslolufta på helsa løs?

Høiskar, B. A. K.; Sundvor, I.; Sousa Santos, G.; Vogt, M.

2016

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