1. Substances of emerging concern in Baltic Sea water: Review on methodological advances for the environmental assessment and proposal for future monitoring
- Author
-
Michael Naumann, Jaakko Mannio, Helena Osterholz, Noomi Asker, Friederike Habedank, Marion Kanwischer, Elin Dahlgren, Kathrin Fisch, Ann-Sofie Wernersson, Detlef E. Schulz-Bull, and Marisa A. Wirth
- Subjects
Baltic States ,Pollutant ,Ecology ,Oceans and Seas ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Sample processing ,General Medicine ,Estrogenic Compounds ,Algal bloom ,Baltic sea ,Environmental protection ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,Seawater ,Environmental impact assessment ,Pesticides ,Surface water ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The Baltic Sea is among the most polluted seas worldwide. Anthropogenic contaminants are mainly introduced via riverine discharge and atmospheric deposition. Regional and international measures have successfully been employed to reduce concentrations of several legacy contaminants. However, current Baltic Sea monitoring programs do not address compounds of emerging concern. Hence, potentially harmful pharmaceuticals, UV filters, polar pesticides, estrogenic compounds, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or naturally produced algal toxins are not taken into account during the assessment of the state of the Baltic Sea. Herein, we conducted literature searches based on systematic approaches and compiled reported data on these substances in Baltic Sea surface water and on methodological advances for sample processing and chemical as well as effect-based analysis of these analytically challenging marine pollutants. Finally, we provide recommendations for improvement of future contaminant and risk assessment in the Baltic Sea, which revolve around a combination of both chemical and effect-based analyses.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF