Back to Search Start Over

Sediment metal enrichment and ecological risk assessment of ten ports and estuaries in the World Harbours Project

Authors :
Laura Airoldi
Roberta Guerra
M. Vaughan
Tasman P. Crowe
Wilson Machado
C. Coughanowr
Guang-Jie Zhou
Victoria Besada
Paul R. Brooks
J.-H. Lee
J. Chrispijn
U. Taylor
F. Wells
Gavin F. Birch
Lucía Viñas
Araceli Puente
Ricardo Erthal Santelli
M. Cameron
Niels C. Munksgaard
Kenneth M.Y. Leung
Juan Bellas
Renato Campello Cordeiro
Aina G. Gómez
Peter D. Steinberg
Abilio Soares-Gomes
J. Whitehead
J. Agius
J. Fortune
Massimo Ponti
Edwina Tanner
Birch, G.F.
Lee, J.-H.
Tanner, E.
Fortune, J.
Munksgaard, N.
Whitehead, J.
Coughanowr, C.
Agius, J.
Chrispijn, J.
Taylor, U.
Wells, F.
Bellas, J.
Besada, V.
Viñas, L.
Soares-Gomes, A.
Cordeiro, R.C.
Machado, W.
Santelli, R.E.
Vaughan, M.
Cameron, M.
Brooks, P.
Crowe, T.
Ponti, M.
Airoldi, L.
Guerra, R.
Puente, A.
Gómez, A.G.
Zhou, G.J.
Leung, K.M.Y.
Steinberg, P.
Source :
Marine Pollution Bulletin. 155:111129
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Ten global harbours were assessed for sediment quality by quantifying the magnitude of anthropogenic change and ecological risk. Anthropogenic change (enrichment) was high for Derwent River and Sydney estuary, moderate for Santander Harbour, Rio de Janeiro and Dublin Port, slight for Hong Kong, minimal for Darwin. All 10 enrichment indices used showed similar results. Derwent River sediment was rated at high ecological risk, followed by Sydney and Santander estuaries with moderate risk. Auckland and Darwin sediments exhibited minimal ecological risk and sediment in the remaining harbours (Dublin, Hong Kong, Ravenna, Ria de Vigo and Rio de Janeiro) were assessed at slight ecological risk. The extraordinary variety of environments and types/quantities/qualities of data investigated resulted in as much a critique and development of methodology, as an assessment of human impact, including unique techniques for elemental normalisation and contaminant classification. Recommendations for an improved technical framework for sediment quality assessment are provided.<br />Sí

Details

ISSN :
0025326X
Volume :
155
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d006ba07e7742a6fb0f1253b56695a9e