4.7 Review

Legacy and emerging pollutants in the Gulf of Gdansk (southern Baltic Sea) - loads and distribution revisited

Journal

MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN
Volume 139, Issue -, Pages 238-255

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2018.11.060

Keywords

Organic contaminants; Radionuclides; Heavy metals; Marine environment contamination; Sea pollution

Funding

  1. Findfish Project: the Numerical Forecasting System for the Marine Environment of the Gulf of Gdansk for Fisheries by European Union Regional Developement Fund - the Pomeranian Voivodship Regional Operational Programme
  2. WaterPuck project - Polish National Centre for Research and Development within BIOSTRATEG III Programme
  3. MICROWASTEBALTIC (Impact of micropollutants emitted from municipal wastewater treatment plants on Baltic Sea ecosystems and assessment of cost-benefit of advanced treatment technologies in a regional perspective) seed money project by European Union INTE
  4. National Science Centre (Poland) [2016/21/B/ST10/01213]

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Coastal marine areas of densely populated countries are exposed to a wide array of human activities having an impact on their ecological status. The Baltic Sea is particularly susceptible to pollution by hazardous substances (limited water exchange, shallowness, and large catchment area). Polish media regularly reports ecological catastrophes in the Gulf of Gdatisk area caused by eg. shipwrecks leaking. Thus, there is a need of a broad scientific based report on recent contaminant loads and distribution. In this review paper, we report loads of contaminants from different obvious and non-obvious sources. We also gather data on legacy and new emerging contaminant concentrations measured in the Gulf of Gdansk within the last decade (2008-2018). The paper also includes available biological effect measurements performed recently as well as a summary of needs and gaps to be filled for the development of reliable risk assessment.

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