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The role of natural science collections in the biomonitoring of environmental contaminants in apex predators in support of the EU’s zero pollution ambition

Authors :
Movalli, Paola
Koschorreck, Jan
Treu, Gabriele
Slobodnik, Jaroslav
Alygizakis, Nikiforos
Androulakakis, Andreas
Badry, Alexander
Baltag, Emanuel
Barbagli, Fausto
Bauer, Kevin
Biesmeijer, Koos
Borgo, Enrico
Cincinelli, Alessandra
Claßen, Daniela
Danielsson, Sara
Dekker, René W.R.J.
Dietz, Rune
Eens, Marcel
Espín, Silvia
Eulaers, Igor
Frahnert, Sylke
Fuiz, Tibor I.
García-Fernández, Antonio J.
Fuchs, Jérôme
Gkotsis, Georgios
Glowacka, Natalia
Gómez-Ramírez, Pilar
Grotti, Marco
Hosner, Peter A.
Johansson, Ulf
Jaspers, Veerle L.B.
Koureas, Dimitris
Krone, Oliver
Kubin, Eero
Lefevre, Christine
Leivits, Madis
Lo Brutto, Sabrina
Lopes, Ricardo Jorge
Lourenço, Rui
Lymberakis, Petros
Madslien, Knut
Martellini, Tania
Mateo, Rafael
Nika, Maria-Christina
Osborn, Dan
Oswald, Peter
Pauwels, Olivier
Pereira, M. Glória
Pezzo, Francesco
Sánchez-Virosta, Pablo
Sarajlić, Nermina
Shore, Richard F.
Soler, Francisco
Sonne, Christian
Thomaidis, Nikolaos
Töpfer, Till
Väinölä, Risto
van den Brink, Nico
Vrezec, Al
Walker, Lee
Weigl, Stephan
Wernham, Chris
Woog, Friederike
Zorrilla, Irene
Duke, Guy
Movalli, Paola
Koschorreck, Jan
Treu, Gabriele
Slobodnik, Jaroslav
Alygizakis, Nikiforos
Androulakakis, Andreas
Badry, Alexander
Baltag, Emanuel
Barbagli, Fausto
Bauer, Kevin
Biesmeijer, Koos
Borgo, Enrico
Cincinelli, Alessandra
Claßen, Daniela
Danielsson, Sara
Dekker, René W.R.J.
Dietz, Rune
Eens, Marcel
Espín, Silvia
Eulaers, Igor
Frahnert, Sylke
Fuiz, Tibor I.
García-Fernández, Antonio J.
Fuchs, Jérôme
Gkotsis, Georgios
Glowacka, Natalia
Gómez-Ramírez, Pilar
Grotti, Marco
Hosner, Peter A.
Johansson, Ulf
Jaspers, Veerle L.B.
Koureas, Dimitris
Krone, Oliver
Kubin, Eero
Lefevre, Christine
Leivits, Madis
Lo Brutto, Sabrina
Lopes, Ricardo Jorge
Lourenço, Rui
Lymberakis, Petros
Madslien, Knut
Martellini, Tania
Mateo, Rafael
Nika, Maria-Christina
Osborn, Dan
Oswald, Peter
Pauwels, Olivier
Pereira, M. Glória
Pezzo, Francesco
Sánchez-Virosta, Pablo
Sarajlić, Nermina
Shore, Richard F.
Soler, Francisco
Sonne, Christian
Thomaidis, Nikolaos
Töpfer, Till
Väinölä, Risto
van den Brink, Nico
Vrezec, Al
Walker, Lee
Weigl, Stephan
Wernham, Chris
Woog, Friederike
Zorrilla, Irene
Duke, Guy
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The chemical industry is the leading sector in the EU in terms of added value. However, contaminants pose a major threat and significant costs to the environment and human health. While EU legislation and international conventions aim to reduce this threat, regulators struggle to assess and manage chemical risks, given the vast number of substances involved and the lack of data on exposure and hazards. The European Green Deal sets a ‘zero pollution ambition for a toxic free environment’ by 2050 and the EU Chemicals Strategy calls for increased monitoring of chemicals in the environment. Monitoring of contaminants in biota can, inter alia: provide regulators with early warning of bioaccumulation problems with chemicals of emerging concern; trigger risk assessment of persistent, bioaccumulative and toxic substances; enable risk assessment of chemical mixtures in biota; enable risk assessment of mixtures; and enable assessment of the effectiveness of risk management measures and of chemicals regulations overall. A number of these purposes are to be addressed under the recently launched European Partnership for Risk Assessment of Chemicals (PARC). Apex predators are of particular value to biomonitoring. Securing sufficient data at European scale implies large-scale, long-term monitoring and a steady supply of large numbers of fresh apex predator tissue samples from across Europe. Natural science collections are very well-placed to supply these. Pan-European monitoring requires effective coordination among field organisations, collections and analytical laboratories for the flow of required specimens, processing and storage of specimens and tissue samples, contaminant analyses delivering pan-European data sets, and provision of specimen and population contextual data. Collections are well-placed to coordinate this. The COST Action European Raptor Biomonitoring Facility provides a well-developed model showing how this can work, integrating a European Raptor Biomonitoring

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363223158
Document Type :
Electronic Resource