Search results for "Biomonitor"

showing 10 items of 211 documents

Analytical methods for human biomonitoring of pesticides. A review.

2015

Biomonitoring of both currently-used and banned-persistent pesticides is a very useful tool for assessing human exposure to these chemicals. In this review, we present current approaches and recent advances in the analytical methods for determining the biomarkers of exposure to pesticides in the most commonly used specimens, such as blood, urine, and breast milk, and in emerging non-invasive matrices such as hair and meconium. We critically discuss the main applications for sample treatment, and the instrumental techniques currently used to determine the most relevant pesticide biomarkers. We finally look at the future trends in this field.

MeconiumMilk HumanChemistryPesticideBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryHuman exposureEnvironmental chemistryEnvironmental healthBiomonitoringEnvironmental ChemistryHumansEnvironmental PollutantsPesticidesSpectroscopyEnvironmental MonitoringHairAnalytica chimica acta
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Evaluating anthropogenic impacts on naturally stressed ecosystems: Revisiting river classifications and biomonitoring metrics along salinity gradients

2019

Naturally stressed ecosystems hold a unique fraction of biodiversity. However, they have been largely ignored in biomonitoring and conservation programmes, such as the EU Water Framework Directive, while global change pressures are threatening their singular values. Here we present a framework to classify and evaluate the ecological quality of naturally stressed rivers along a water salinity gradient. We gathered datasets, including aquatic macroinvertebrate assemblages and environmental information, for 243 river locations across the western Mediterranean to: a) gauge the role of natural stressors (salinity) in driving aquatic community richness and composition; b) make river classificatio…

Mediterranean climateSettore BIO/07 - EcologiaSalinityEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMacro invertebratesBiodiversity010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesSaline riversRiversAbundance (ecology)MacroinvertebrateBiomonitoringAnimalsEnvironmental ChemistryEcosystemWaste Management and DisposalGlobal changeEcosystemSaline river0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEcologyBiodiversityAbiotic stressPollutionSalinityMoroccoAbiotic streWater Framework DirectiveItalySpainSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataBiomonitoringEnvironmental scienceWater framework directiveSpecies richnessEnvironmental MonitoringScience of the Total Environment 658: 912-921 (2019)
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Il Mercurio nel suolo e in ambiente terrestre

2015

Le interazioni del Hg con l'ambiente costituiscono il ciclo geochimico di questo elemento che si esplica per mezzo di complessi processi fisico-chimici differenti per ciascun comparto geochimico. Si stima che circa i due terzi del mercurio presente in ambiente sia stato prodotto durante il ventesimo secolo, e che il carico di mercurio immesso attualmente sia aumentato di circa 3 volte rispetto agli inizi del 1900 (Mason et al.. 1994). Il comparto ambientale certamente più coinvolto dalle emissioni di mercurio è quello atmosferico, da cui poi l’elemento si diffonde anche negli altri comparti, suolo e sedimenti compresi (Filzgerald & Clarkson, 1991). L’Atmosfera costituisce un importante …

Mercurio Augusta inquinamento biomonitoraggioSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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Can we consider a natural environment always of high quality and adequate to protect population from potential risks of health threats?

2013

The question posed in the title arise because the current knowledge suggests that there are important, both beneficial and adverse, relationships between natural environment and human health. The human body obtains metals and metalloids from diet, some of which are derived from local foodstuffs and municipal water supplies, and it is therefore plausible that areas characterized by various types of bedrock and superficial materials, upon which food is grown and water drained, provide different availabilities of trace elements. The present study aimed at elucidating whether the degree of human exposure to trace elements is subject to changes in local environmental factors. This hypothesis was…

Metals in human hair Human biomonitoring Environmental geochemistrySettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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Influence of industrial activity on metal and metalloid contents in scalp hair of adolescents

2015

Petrochemical industries represent a controversial although important economical resource. They offer a great deal of job opportunities producing also a development of several areas. However, such kind of industrial plants are responsible for the change of the environmental background through the emission of toxic pollutants such as metalsmetalloids and organic compounds. People living in cities close to such industrial plants are particularly exposed to a severe environmental decline, which implies the deterioration of the quality of air, soil, water and food with the consequent human health concerns. The municipalities of Gela (GL) and Pace del Mela (PM), located respectively along the Me…

Metals in human hair human biomonitoring environmental geochemistry.Settore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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Active Moss biomonitoring of mercury in the mine-polluted area of Mt. Amiata (Central Italy)

2015

In the winter 2013, mercury concentrations in air from the mine-polluted area of Mt. Amiata (1738 m a.s.l.), in southern Tuscany (Central Italy), were measured by active moss biomonitoring. This area is part of the geologic anomaly of Hg in the Mediterranean basin, which contains about 65 % of the world’s cinnabar (HgS). Mt. Amiata covers some 400 km2 and is drained by several rivers. Esploitation activity at Abbadia S. Salvatore, in the SE sector of the mountain, sprang up during the 19th century as one of the largest mercury mining and smelting plants in Europe, after those of Almaden Spain. In this area, Sphagnum moss bags were exposed for about two months, from October to December 2013.…

Mt. Amiata biomonitoring moss bags mercury trace elementsSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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Biomonitoring of volcanogenic trace elements using two endemic species (Senecio aethnensis and Rumex aethnensis) on Mt. Etna.

2009

A biomonitoring survey, above treeline level, using two endemic species (Senecio aethnensis and Rumex aethnensis) was performed on Mt. Etna, in order to evaluate the dispersion and the impact of volcanic emissions. Samples of leaves were collected in summer 2008 from 30 sites in the upper part of the volcano (1500-3000 m a.s.l). Acid digestion of samples was carried out with a microwave oven, and 44 elements were analysed by using plasma spectrometry (ICP-MS and ICP-OES). The highest concentrations of all investigated elements were found in the samples collected closest to the degassing craters, and in the downwind sector, confirming that the eastern flank of Mt. Etna is the most impacted b…

Mt. Etnabiomonitoringvolcanic plumeSenecio aethnensitrace elementRumex aethnensi
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Preliminary data on trace element emissions from Nyiragongo volcano (DR Congo)

2013

Nyiragongo volcano trace element biomonitoring
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Preliminary results of biomonitoring survey at Virunga Volcanic Province (D.R. Congo), Eastern Africa.

2018

Biomonitoring techniques have been widely used in environmental studies to monitor anthropogenic pollutants. Recently such techniques have been also applied to ascertain the impact of contaminants naturally released by volcanic activity (Calabrese et al., 2015; Arndt et al., 2017). In the present study a biomonitoring survey has been performed in different sites around Nyiragongo and Nyamulagira (D.R. Congo), active volcanoes in the western branch of the East African Rift. We applied both active and passive biomonitoring techniques in order to investigate the release of some harmful chemical elements by Nyiragongo and Nyamulagira: the former was performed by exposing moss-bags (Sphagnum sp.…

Nyiragongo Nyamulagira biomonitoring
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Classification and retrieval on macroinvertebrate image databases

2011

Aquatic ecosystems are continuously threatened by a growing number of human induced changes. Macroinvertebrate biomonitoring is particularly efficient in pinpointing the cause-effect structure between slow and subtle changes and their detrimental consequences in aquatic ecosystems. The greatest obstacle to implementing efficient biomonitoring is currently the cost-intensive human expert taxonomic identification of samples. While there is evidence that automated recognition techniques can match human taxa identification accuracy at greatly reduced costs, so far the development of automated identification techniques for aquatic organisms has been minimal. In this paper, we focus on advancing …

NymphAquatic OrganismsInsectaDatabases FactualComputer scienceBayesian probabilityta1172Health InformaticsMachine learningcomputer.software_genreData retrievalRiversSupport Vector MachinesImage Processing Computer-AssistedAnimalsMultilayer perceptronsEcosystemta113Network architectureBenthic macroinvertebrateta112Artificial neural networkta213business.industryBayesian networkBayes TheoremPerceptronClassificationRadial basis function networksComputer Science ApplicationsSupport vector machineBiomonitoringBayesian NetworksData miningArtificial intelligenceNeural Networks ComputerbusinesscomputerClassifier (UML)AlgorithmsEnvironmental MonitoringComputers in Biology and Medicine
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