| Literature DB >> 27272921 |
Iris Barjhoux1, Lise C Fechner2,3, Jérémie D Lebrun2, Adriana Anzil4, Sophie Ayrault5, Hélène Budzinski6, Jérôme Cachot6, Laetitia Charron7, Arnaud Chaumot8, Christelle Clérandeau6, Odile Dedourge-Geffard7, Juliette Faburé2,3, Adeline François8, Olivier Geffard8, Isabelle George4, Pierre Labadie6, Yves Lévi9, Gabriel Munoz6, Patrice Noury8, Lucie Oziol9, Hervé Quéau8, Pierre Servais4, Emmanuelle Uher2, Nastassia Urien2, Alain Geffard7.
Abstract
Quality assessment of environments under high anthropogenic pressures such as the Seine Basin, subjected to complex and chronic inputs, can only be based on combined chemical and biological analyses. The present study integrates and summarizes a multidisciplinary dataset acquired throughout a 1-year monitoring survey conducted at three workshop sites along the Seine River (PIREN-Seine program), upstream and downstream of the Paris conurbation, during four seasonal campaigns using a weight-of-evidence approach. Sediment and water column chemical analyses, bioaccumulation levels and biomarker responses in caged gammarids, and laboratory (eco)toxicity bioassays were integrated into four lines of evidence (LOEs). Results from each LOE clearly reflected an anthropogenic gradient, with contamination levels and biological effects increasing from upstream to downstream of Paris, in good agreement with the variations in the structure and composition of bacterial communities from the water column. Based on annual average data, the global hazard was summarized as "moderate" at the upstream station and as "major" at the two downstream ones. Seasonal variability was also highlighted; the winter campaign was least impacted. The model was notably improved using previously established reference and threshold values from national-scale studies. It undoubtedly represents a powerful practical tool to facilitate the decision-making processes of environment managers within the framework of an environmental risk assessment strategy.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial community; Bioassays; Bioavailability; Biomarkers; Environmental risk; Pollutants; Seine River; Weight of evidence
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27272921 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-016-6993-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 4.223