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A systematic review of emerging contaminants in the Greater Bay Area (GBA), China: Current baselines, knowledge gaps, and research and management priorities

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
Volume 131, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2022.02.002

Keywords

Pearl River Estuary; Pearl River Delta; Emerging contaminants; Risk management; Environmental baseline

Funding

  1. Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Guangzhou) [GML2019ZD0409, SMSEGL20SC01-V]

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The development of the Greater Bay area in China has led to significant pressures on the ecosystems in the Pearl River Delta. This systematic review of published papers examines the trends, sampling focus, and concentrations of emerging contaminants in the area. The study finds that while there is an increasing number of publications on emerging contaminants, they are understudied compared to traditional contaminants. The review also identifies data coverage issues and significant variations in reported contaminant concentrations.
Development of the Greater Bay area, China (GBA) has imposed significant pressures on ecosystems within the wider Pearl River Delta (PRD) system, including through inputs of contaminants from the GBA's rapidly expanding urban, industrial and agricultural activities. Here, we assess publication trends, sampling focus, and concentrations observed for a range of emerging contaminants (pharmaceutical and personal care products, pesticides, other endocrine disrupting chemicals, platinum group elements, and microplastics) in the GBA, via a systematic review of papers (n = 407) indexed in Science Direct, SpringerLink and Wiley Online databases. While emerging contaminants form the focus of increasing numbers of publications since 2006, they are understudied compared to more traditionally-measured contaminants (here, DDT and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, PAHs). BisphenolA was the most widely studied of the emerging contaminants (n = 41 studies) in the GBA, followed by macrolides (n = 32 studies). While multiple point measurements with high precision and low detection limits have been reported for various emerging contaminants, these have not been integrated for management purposes. A relatively high percentage of studies present data from single deployments (48% of studies, despite strong seasonality in the PRD system), data coverage is variable spatially, and reported contaminant concentrations vary significantly (over one to four orders of magnitude). We assess the currently published knowledge under the Source-Pathway-Receptor contaminant linkage model and use this to identify (a) current research emphasis in relation to assessment of contaminant risk, and (b) key knowledge gaps around sources, pathways and receptors in the GBA system.

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