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The comet assay applied to cells of the eye

Azqueta, Amaya; Rundén-Pran, Elise; Elje, Elisabeth; Nicolaissen, Bjørn; Haug, Kristiane; Smeringaiova, Ingrida; Jirsova, Katerina; Collins, Andrew Richard

Oxford University Press

2018

Genotoxicity of engineered nanoparticles

Dusinska, Maria; El Yamani, Naouale; Elje, Elisabeth; Rundén-Pran, Elise

Elsevier

2018

Emerging pollutants in the EU: 10 years of NORMAN in support of environmental policies and regulations

Dulio, Valeria; van Bavel, Bert; Broström-Lundén, Eva; Harmsen, Joop; Hollender, Juliane; Schlabach, Martin; Slobodnik, Jaroslav; Thomas, Kevin; Koschorreck, Jan

In 2005, the European Commission funded the NORMAN project to promote a permanent network of reference laboratories and research centers, including academia, industry, standardization bodies, and NGOs. Since then, NORMAN has (i) facilitated a more rapid and wide-scope exchange of data on the occurrence and effects of contaminants of emerging concern (CECs), (ii) improved data quality and comparability via validation and harmonization of common sampling and measurement methods (chemical and biological), (iii) provided more transparent information and monitoring data on CECs, and (iv) established an independent and competent forum for the technical/scientific debate on issues related to emerging substances. NORMAN plays a significant role as an independent organization at the interface between science and policy, with the advantage of speaking to the European Commission and other public institutions with the “bigger voice” of more than 70 members from 20 countries. This article provides a summary of the first 10 years of the NORMAN network. It takes stock of the work done so far and outlines NORMAN’s vision for a Europe-wide collaboration on CECs and sustainable links from research to policy-making. It contains an overview of the state of play in prioritizing and monitoring emerging substances with reference to several innovative technologies and monitoring approaches. It provides the point of view of the NORMAN network on a burning issue—the regulation of CECs—and presents the positions of various stakeholders in the field (DG ENV, EEA, ECHA, and national agencies) who participated in the NORMAN workshop in October 2016. The main messages and conclusions from the round table discussions are briefly presented.

Springer

2018

Sminkerester funnet i fisk utenfor Svalbard

Warner, Nicholas Alexander (intervjuobjekt); Juell, Ingrid Henriksen; Steinholt, Martin (journalister)

2018

The superstatistical nature and interoccurrence time of atmospheric mercury concentration fluctuations

Carbone, Francesco; Bruno, Antonio Giovanni; Naccarato, Attilio; De Simone, Francesco; Gencarelli, Christian Natale; Sprovieri, F.; Hedgecock, I. M.; Landis, Matthew S.; Skov, Henrik; Pfaffhuber, Katrine A.; Read, Katie A.; Martin, Lywill G.; Angot, Hélène; Dommergue, Aurélien; Magand, O.; Pirrone, N.

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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.

MDPI

2018

Nordmenn er fulle av miljøgifter. Men hva så?

Hanssen, Linda (intervjuobjekt); Eliassen-Coker, Ida (journalist)

2018

Refining in vitro models for nanomaterial exposure to cells and tissues

Guggenheim, Emily J.; Milani, Silvia; Röttgermann, Peter J. F.; Dusinska, Maria; Saout, Christelle; Salvati, Anna; Rädler, Joachim O.; Lynch, Iseult

Elsevier

2018

Strengths and weaknesses of the FAIRMODE benchmarking methodology for the evaluation of air quality models

Monteiro, Alexandra; Durka, Pawel; Flandorfer, Claudia; Georgieva, Emilia; Guerreiro, Cristina; Kushta, Jonilda; Malherbe, L.; Maiheu, B.; Miranda, Ana Isabel; Sousa Santos, Gabriela; Stocker, Jenny R.; Trimpeneers, Elke; Tognet, Frédéric; Stortini, Michele; Wesseling, Joost; Janssen, Stijn; Thunis, Philippe

Springer

2018

Assessing, quantifying and valuing the ecosystem services of coastal lagoons

Newton, Alice; Brito, Ana C.; Icely, John D.; Derolez, Valérie; Clara, Inês; Angus, Stewart; Schernewski, Gerard; Inácio, Miguel; Lillebø, Ana I.; Sousa, Ana Isabel; Béjaoui, Béchir; Solidoro, Cosimo; Tosic, Marko; Cañedo-Argüelles, Miguel; Yamamuro, Masumi; Reizopoulou, Sofia; Tseng, Hsiao-Chun; Donata, Canu; Roselli, Leonilde; Maanan, Mohamed; Cristina, Sónia; Ruiz-Fernández, Ana Carolina; Lima, Ricardo; Kjerfve, Björn; Rubio-Cisneros, Nadia; Perez-Ruzafa, Angel; Marcos, Concepción; Pastres, Roberto; Pranovi, Fabio; Snoussi, Maria; Turpie, Jane; Tuchkovenko, Yurii; Dyack, Brenda; Brookes, Justin; Povilanskas, Ramunas; Khokhlov, Valeriy

The natural conservation of coastal lagoons is important not only for their ecological importance, but also because of the valuable ecosystem services they provide for human welfare and wellbeing. Coastal lagoons are shallow semi-enclosed systems that support important habitats such as wetlands, mangroves, salt-marshes and seagrass meadows, as well as a rich biodiversity. Coastal lagoons are also complex social-ecological systems and the ecosystem services that lagoons deliver provide livelihoods, benefits wellbeing and welfare to humans. This study assessed, quantified and valued the ecosystem services of 32 coastal lagoons. The main findings of the study were: (i) the definitions of ecosystem services are still not generally accepted; (ii) the quantification of ecosystem services is made in many different ways, using different units; (iii) the evaluation in monetary terms of some ecosystem service is problematic, often relying on non-monetary evaluation methods; (iv) when ecosystem services are valued in monetary terms, this may represent very different human benefits; and, (v) different aspects of climate change, including increasing temperature (SST), sea-level rise (SLR) and changes in rainfall patterns threaten the valuable ecosystem services of coastal lagoons.

2018

Miriam (26) måtte begynne med astmamedisin da hun flyttet til Oslo

Høiskar, Britt Ann Kåstad (intervjuobjekt); Silseth, Ingvild (journalist)

2018

Kuldebølge og skadelig luft

Høiskar, Britt Ann Kåstad (intervjuobjekt)

2018

Tusenvis av plastbiter flyter mot Arktis

Solbakken, Christine Forsetlund

Norges forskningsråd

2018

Discrepancy between simulated and observed ethane and propane levels explained by underestimated fossil emissions

Dalsøren, Stig Bjørløw; Myhre, Gunnar; Hodnebrog, Øivind; Myhre, Cathrine Lund; Stohl, Andreas; Pisso, Ignacio; Schwietzke, Stefan; Höglund-Isaksson, Lena; Helmig, Detlev; Reimann, Stefan; Sauvage, Stéphane; Schmidbauer, Norbert; Read, Katie A.; Carpenter, Lucy J.; Lewis, Alastair C.; Punjabi, Shalini; Wallasch, Markus

2018

CITI-SENSE Citizens' Observatories Architecture

Liu, Hai-Ying; Berre, Arne- Jørgen; Kobernus, Michael John; Fredriksen, Mirjam; Rombouts, Richard; Tamlin, Andrei; Cole-Hunter, Tom; Santiago, Leonardo; Bartonova, Alena

This paper introduces the architecture of the CITI-SENSE Citizens’ Observatories based on the ISO 19119 reference model. It describes the various parts of the architecture including boundary services with sensors and apps and data management services with the CITI-SENSE data model. It also describes the Web Feature Service (WFS) storage support and the reusable visualisation widgets used for both apps and web portals in various Citizens’ Observatories.

European Commission Joint Research Centre

2018

An aerosol particle containing enriched uranium encountered in the remote upper troposphere

Murphy, D. M.; Froyd, K. D.; Apel, E.; Blake, D.; Evangeliou, Nikolaos; Hornbrook, R. S.; Peischl, J.; Ray, E.; Ryerson, T. B.; Thompson, C.; Stohl, Andreas

Elsevier

2018

Validation of nitrogen dioxide and Arctic methane from S5P (VANDAM)

Schneider, Philipp; Fjæraa, Ann Mari; Svendby, Tove Marit

2018

What is the effect of phasing out long-chain per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances on the concentrations of perfluoroalkyl acids and their precursors in the environment? A systematic review

Land, Magnus; de Wit, Cynthia A.; Bignert, Anders; Cousins, Ian T.; Herzke, Dorte; Johansson, Jana H.; Martin, Jonathan W.

There is a concern that continued emissions of man-made per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) may cause environmental and human health effects. Now widespread in human populations and in the environment, several PFASs are also present in remote regions of the world, but the environmental transport and fate of PFASs are not well understood. Phasing out the manufacture of some types of PFASs started in 2000 and further regulatory and voluntary actions have followed. The objective of this review is to understand the effects of these actions on global scale PFAS concentrations.

BioMed Central (BMC)

2018

Atmospheric histories and emissions of chlorofluorocarbons CFC-13 (CClF3), ΣCFC-114 (C2Cl2F4), and CFC-115 (C2ClF5)

Vollmer, Martin K.; Young, Dickon; Trudinger, Cathy M.; Muhle, Jens; Henne, Stephan; Rigby, Matthew; Park, Sunyoung; Li, Shanlan; Guillevic, Myriam; Mitrevski, Blagoj; Harth, Christina M.; Miller, Benjamin R.; Reimann, Stefan; Yao, Bo; Steele, L. Paul; Wyss, Simon A.; Lunder, Chris Rene; Arduini, Jgor; McCulloch, Archie; Wu, Songhao; Rhee, Tae Siek; Wang, Ray H. J.; Salameh, Peter K.; Hermansen, Ove; Hill, Matthias; Langenfelds, Ray L.; Ivy, Diane; O'Doherty, Simon; Krummel, Paul B.; Maione, Michela; Etheridge, David M.; Zhou, Lingxi; Fraser, Paul J.; Prinn, Ronald G.; Weiss, Ray F.; Simmonds, Peter G.

Based on observations of the chlorofluorocarbons CFC-13 (chlorotrifluoromethane), ΣCFC-114 (combined measurement of both isomers of dichlorotetrafluoroethane), and CFC-115 (chloropentafluoroethane) in atmospheric and firn samples, we reconstruct records of their tropospheric histories spanning nearly 8 decades. These compounds were measured in polar firn air samples, in ambient air archived in canisters, and in situ at the AGAGE (Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment) network and affiliated sites. Global emissions to the atmosphere are derived from these observations using an inversion based on a 12-box atmospheric transport model. For CFC-13, we provide the first comprehensive global analysis. This compound increased monotonically from its first appearance in the atmosphere in the late 1950s to a mean global abundance of 3.18 ppt (dry-air mole fraction in parts per trillion, pmol mol−1) in 2016. Its growth rate has decreased since the mid-1980s but has remained at a surprisingly high mean level of 0.02 ppt yr−1 since 2000, resulting in a continuing growth of CFC-13 in the atmosphere. ΣCFC-114 increased from its appearance in the 1950s to a maximum of 16.6 ppt in the early 2000s and has since slightly declined to 16.3 ppt in 2016. CFC-115 increased monotonically from its first appearance in the 1960s and reached a global mean mole fraction of 8.49 ppt in 2016. Growth rates of all three compounds over the past years are significantly larger than would be expected from zero emissions. Under the assumption of unchanging lifetimes and atmospheric transport patterns, we derive global emissions from our measurements, which have remained unexpectedly high in recent years: mean yearly emissions for the last decade (2007–2016) of CFC-13 are at 0.48 ± 0.15 kt yr−1 (> 15 % of past peak emissions), of ΣCFC-114 at 1.90 ± 0.84 kt yr−1 (∼ 10 % of peak emissions), and of CFC-115 at 0.80 ± 0.50 kt yr−1 (> 5 % of peak emissions). Mean yearly emissions of CFC-115 for 2015–2016 are 1.14 ± 0.50 kt yr−1 and have doubled compared to the 2007–2010 minimum. We find CFC-13 emissions from aluminum smelters but if extrapolated to global emissions, they cannot account for the lingering global emissions determined from the atmospheric observations. We find impurities of CFC-115 in the refrigerant HFC-125 (CHF2CF3) but if extrapolated to global emissions, they can neither account for the lingering global CFC-115 emissions determined from the atmospheric observations nor for their recent increases. We also conduct regional inversions for the years 2012–2016 for the northeastern Asian area using observations from the Korean AGAGE site at Gosan and find significant emissions for ΣCFC-114 and CFC-115, suggesting that a large fraction of their global emissions currently occur in northeastern Asia and more specifically on the Chinese mainland.

2018

Inverse modelling of European CH4 emissions during 2006–2012 using different inverse models and reassessed atmospheric observations

Bergamashci, Peter; Karstens, Ute; Manning, Alistair J.; Saunois, Marielle; Tsuruta, Aki; Berchet, Antoine; Vermeulen, Alexander T.; Arnold, Tim; Janssens-Maenhout, Greet; Hammer, Samuel; Levin, Ingeborg; Schmidt, Martina; Ramonet, Michel; Lopez, Morgan; Lavric, Jost; Aalto, Tuula; Chen, Huilin; Feist, Dietrich G.; Gerbig, Christoph; Haszpra, László; Hermansen, Ove; Manca, Giovanni; Moncrieff, John; Meinhardt, Frank; Necki, Jaroslaw; Galkowski, Michal; O'Doherty, Simon; Paramonova, Nina; Scheeren, Hubertus A.; Steinbacher, Martin; Dlugokencky, Ed

We present inverse modelling (top down) estimates of European methane (CH4) emissions for 2006–2012 based on a new quality-controlled and harmonised in situ data set from 18 European atmospheric monitoring stations. We applied an ensemble of seven inverse models and performed four inversion experiments, investigating the impact of different sets of stations and the use of a priori information on emissions.

The inverse models infer total CH4 emissions of 26.8 (20.2–29.7) Tg CH4 yr−1 (mean, 10th and 90th percentiles from all inversions) for the EU-28 for 2006–2012 from the four inversion experiments. For comparison, total anthropogenic CH4 emissions reported to UNFCCC (bottom up, based on statistical data and emissions factors) amount to only 21.3 Tg CH4 yr−1 (2006) to 18.8 Tg CH4 yr−1 (2012). A potential explanation for the higher range of top-down estimates compared to bottom-up inventories could be the contribution from natural sources, such as peatlands, wetlands, and wet soils. Based on seven different wetland inventories from the Wetland and Wetland CH4 Inter-comparison of Models Project (WETCHIMP), total wetland emissions of 4.3 (2.3–8.2) Tg CH4 yr−1 from the EU-28 are estimated. The hypothesis of significant natural emissions is supported by the finding that several inverse models yield significant seasonal cycles of derived CH4 emissions with maxima in summer, while anthropogenic CH4 emissions are assumed to have much lower seasonal variability. Taking into account the wetland emissions from the WETCHIMP ensemble, the top-down estimates are broadly consistent with the sum of anthropogenic and natural bottom-up inventories. However, the contribution of natural sources and their regional distribution remain rather uncertain.

Furthermore, we investigate potential biases in the inverse models by comparison with regular aircraft profiles at four European sites and with vertical profiles obtained during the Infrastructure for Measurement of the European Carbon Cycle (IMECC) aircraft campaign. We present a novel approach to estimate the biases in the derived emissions, based on the comparison of simulated and measured enhancements of CH4 compared to the background, integrated over the entire boundary layer and over the lower troposphere. The estimated average regional biases range between −40 and 20 % at the aircraft profile sites in France, Hungary and Poland.

2018

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