Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.

137Cs baseline levels in the Mediterranean and Black Sea: A cross-basin survey of the CIESM Mediterranean Mussel Watch programme

Title137Cs baseline levels in the Mediterranean and Black Sea: A cross-basin survey of the CIESM Mediterranean Mussel Watch programme
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsThébault, H., Rodriguez y Baena A.M., Andral B., Barisic D., Albaladejo J.B., Bologa A.S., Boudjenoun R., Delfanti Roberta, Egorov V.N., T. Khoukhi El, Florou H., Kniewald G., Noureddine A., Patrascu V., Pham M.K., Scarpato A., Stokozov N.A., Topcuoglu S., and Warnau M.
JournalMarine Pollution Bulletin
Volume57
Pagination801-806
ISSN0025326X
KeywordsAnimals, article, Baseline levels, Bioavailability, Biodiversity, biological monitoring, biomonitoring, bivalve, Bivalvia, Black sea, cesium 137, Cesium compounds, cesium isotope, Cesium Isotopes, Coastal stations, concentration (composition), Concentration (process), controlled study, Data Collection, Environmental monitoring, Eurasia, hydrographic survey, Mediterranean Mussel Watch (MMW), Mediterranean Sea, Mediterranean Sea (West), mussel, Mytilus, Mytilus galloprovincialis, nonhuman, Oceans and Seas, pollution monitoring, Power Plants, quantitative analysis, Radioactive, Radioisotopes, radionuclide, sea pollution, Water Pollutants
Abstract

The common mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis was selected as unique biomonitor species to implement a regional monitoring programme, the CIESM Mediterranean Mussel Watch (MMW), in the Mediterranean and Black Seas. As of today, and upon standardization of the methodological approach, the MMW Network has been able to quantify 137Cs levels in mussels from 60 coastal stations and to produce the first distribution map of this artificial radionuclide at the scale of the entire Mediterranean and Black Seas. While measured 137Cs levels were found to be very low (usually <1 Bq kg-1 wet wt) 137Cs activity concentrations in the Black Sea and North Aegean Sea were up to two orders of magnitude higher than those in the western Mediterranean Basin. Such effects, far from representing a threat to human populations or the environment, reflect a persistent signature of the Chernobyl fallout in this area. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Notes

cited By 40

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-45049087738&doi=10.1016%2fj.marpolbul.2007.11.010&partnerID=40&md5=0d58e00201e3d3b472fe9cf57ae08360
DOI10.1016/j.marpolbul.2007.11.010
Citation KeyThébault2008801