intertidal surface
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Chemosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 245 ◽  
pp. 125590
Author(s):  
Hazzeman Haris ◽  
Ahmad Zaharin Aris ◽  
Mazlin Bin Mokhtar ◽  
Ley Juen Looi

2019 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 100624 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Yang ◽  
Ri-Zhong Lan ◽  
Dong-Liang Lu ◽  
Solomon Felix Dan ◽  
Zhen-Jun Kang ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 07035
Author(s):  
Ximing Luo ◽  
Hang Lang ◽  
Wenjuan Wang

Freshwater mental contaminants which in the estuary tend to precipitate into intertidal surface sediments during freshwater-seawater mixing because of heavy water chemical reaction. The impacts of ferric hydroxide on the removal rate of Cr with increasing pH and salinity were conducted by laboratory simulation experiment. The removal rate of Cr by ferric hydroxide decreased with increasing pH from river water to seawater in the estuary; this is because pH changed the Zeta potential of ferric hydroxide. And with increasing salinity, the removal rate of Cr by ferric hydroxide firstly decreased and then increased. On the hand, Na+ entering the sliding surface, which could improve Zeta potential and stability of ferric hydroxide colloid, which leads to the amount of Cr removal by colloid aggregation decreased. On the other hand, there was competitive adsorption between Cland CrO42-/HCrO4-. In this study, Fe was the key factor of heavy metal Cr distribution with pH change.


2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 482-491
Author(s):  
Hang Lang ◽  
Liang Chen ◽  
Guohua Hou ◽  
Wenjuan Wang ◽  
Shengzhang Zou ◽  
...  

Abstract Freshwater contaminants tend to precipitate into intertidal surface sediments, particularly in the estuary and intertidal zones during freshwater–seawater mixing. Quinolone-type antibiotics are such contaminants, and their concentrations in the intertidal sediments are important indicators for the whole spectrum of antibiotics used in the estuary and adjacent areas. The impacts of sediment types and environmental factors on the distribution of 16 quinolones were probed based on nine Bohai and 42 Yellow Sea intertidal sediment samples. The samples were collected from locations along the coastal areas in China. Quinolones were detected in all samples, while moxifloxacin, ciprofloxacin, and ofloxacin were detected at a frequency >50%. Sediment types, pH, organic carbon content, K, Na and Fe concentrations had little correlation with quinolone distributions in intertidal sediments. However, combined concentrations of Ca + Mg (46.7 g/kg in Bohai and 13.7 g/kg in Yellow Sea samples) appeared to correlate with oxolinic acid detecting frequencies (88.9% and 4.8%, respectively) and concentrations (2.0–10.1 μg/g and up to 3.09 μg/g, respectively). Different detection frequencies of the quinolones could be attributed to the formation of cation bridges between oxolinic acid and Ca + Mg, which results in dominant sorption of oxolinic acid at different locations and sediment matrices.


2017 ◽  
Vol 83 ◽  
pp. 41-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruilian Yu ◽  
Gongren Hu ◽  
Chengqi Lin ◽  
Qiuli Yang ◽  
Chenchen Zhang ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 (1) ◽  
pp. 2017340
Author(s):  
Alan Mearns ◽  
David Janka ◽  
Rob Campbell ◽  
Scott Pegau ◽  
Kate McLaughlin ◽  
...  

Marine populations - including fisheries, plankton, seabirds, kelp beds and biota of exposed rocky shorelines - undergo dramatic long term and inter-annual variability due in part to climate variability. Less is known about long-term variability of inter-tidal marine populations on protected rocky shorelines impacted by oil spills. Following over a decade (1989 to 2000) of detailed monitoring of rocky intertidal marine life at previously oiled and unoiled sites in Prince William Sound, the senior author continued photo-monitoring at up to nine sites, with substantial and grateful assistance of other scientists and local citizens. These observations, between 2001 and 2016, added 15 years to the previous 11 years of detailed intertidal monitoring conducted by NOAA HazMat. Further, a landslide in 2000 produced a 300 m long bare rock intertidal surface, not unlike oiled rocky sites areas that were subjected to high-pressure hot-water washing in 1989. This provided an additional unique opportunity to document colonization of fresh substrate on a bare-rock shoreline for more than 12 years. Recovery of conspicuous rocky inter-tidal biota on nearly barren surfaces occurred rapidly and returned to within the range of natural variability in 3 to 4 years. The additional decades of monitoring helped confirm the nature of natural variability and further that there have been 4 - o 10-year fluctuations in the abundance (percent cover) of dominant seaweeds and mussels in Western Prince William Sound. Four periods of heavy rockweed cover were separated by many years of little or no cover both at previously-oiled and unoiled sites indicating this variability had little to do with the spill and subsequent clean up. This variability challenged a common definition of recovery (return to conditions prior to the spill), and added further support to the results of our first decade of detailed monitoring that recovery may be defined as “a return to within the natural range of variability”. This poster acknowledges the assistance of volunteers who went out of their way to visit and photograph the sites, describes the approach and methods used during the most recent 15 years provides graphics highlighting the long-term and inter-annual variability and, hopefully, stimulates others to use annual photography to document and visualize linter-annual biological variability and long-term changes in shoreline biology.


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