| Literature DB >> 35244108 |
Hayley Hung1, Crispin Halsall2, Hollie Ball2, Terry Bidleman3, Jordi Dachs4, Amila De Silva5, Mark Hermanson6, Roland Kallenborn7,8, Derek Muir5, Roxana Sühring9,10, Xiaoping Wang11, Simon Wilson12.
Abstract
Climate change brings about significant changes in the physical environment in the Arctic. Increasing temperatures, sea ice retreat, slumping permafrost, changing sea ice regimes, glacial loss and changes in precipitation patterns can all affect how contaminants distribute within the Arctic environment and subsequently impact the Arctic ecosystems. In this review, we summarized observed evidence of the influence of climate change on contaminant circulation and transport among various Arctic environment media, including air, ice, snow, permafrost, fresh water and the marine environment. We have also drawn on parallel examples observed in Antarctica and the Tibetan Plateau, to broaden the discussion on how climate change may influence contaminant fate in similar cold-climate ecosystems. Significant knowledge gaps on indirect effects of climate change on contaminants in the Arctic environment, including those of extreme weather events, increase in forests fires, and enhanced human activities leading to new local contaminant emissions, have been identified. Enhanced mobilization of contaminants to marine and freshwater ecosystems has been observed as a result of climate change, but better linkages need to be made between these observed effects with subsequent exposure and accumulation of contaminants in biota. Emerging issues include those of Arctic contamination by microplastics and higher molecular weight halogenated natural products (hHNPs) and the implications of such contamination in a changing Arctic environment is explored.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35244108 DOI: 10.1039/d1em00485a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Process Impacts ISSN: 2050-7887 Impact factor: 5.334