Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in...
View graph of relations

Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in soils, sediments and waters : achievements and results of the EU project AquaTerra : a review.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in soils, sediments and waters : achievements and results of the EU project AquaTerra : a review. / Barth, J. A. C.; Grathwohl, P.; Fowler, H. J. et al.
In: Agronomy for Sustainable Development, Vol. 29, No. 1, 01.2009, p. 161-173.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Barth, JAC, Grathwohl, P, Fowler, HJ, Bellin, A, Gerzabek, MH, Lair, GJ, Barceló, D, Petrovic, M, Navarro, A, Négrel, P, Petelet-Giraud, E, Darmendrail, D, Rijnaarts, H, Langenhoff, A, de Weert, J, Slob, A, van der Zaan, BM, Gerritse, J, Frank, E, Gutierrez, A, Kretzschmar, R, Gocht, T, Steidle, D, Garrido, F, Jones, KC, Meijer, S, Moeckel, C, Marsman, A, Klaver, G, Vogel, T, Bürger, C, Kolditz, O, Broers, HP, Baran, N, Joziasse, J, Von Tümpling, W, Van Gaans, P, Merly, C, Chapman, A, Brouyère, S, Batlle Aguilar, J, Orban, P, Tas, N & Smidt, H 2009, 'Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in soils, sediments and waters : achievements and results of the EU project AquaTerra : a review.', Agronomy for Sustainable Development, vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 161-173. https://doi.org/10.1051/agro:2007060

APA

Barth, J. A. C., Grathwohl, P., Fowler, H. J., Bellin, A., Gerzabek, M. H., Lair, G. J., Barceló, D., Petrovic, M., Navarro, A., Négrel, P., Petelet-Giraud, E., Darmendrail, D., Rijnaarts, H., Langenhoff, A., de Weert, J., Slob, A., van der Zaan, B. M., Gerritse, J., Frank, E., ... Smidt, H. (2009). Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in soils, sediments and waters : achievements and results of the EU project AquaTerra : a review. Agronomy for Sustainable Development, 29(1), 161-173. https://doi.org/10.1051/agro:2007060

Vancouver

Barth JAC, Grathwohl P, Fowler HJ, Bellin A, Gerzabek MH, Lair GJ et al. Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in soils, sediments and waters : achievements and results of the EU project AquaTerra : a review. Agronomy for Sustainable Development. 2009 Jan;29(1):161-173. doi: 10.1051/agro:2007060

Author

Barth, J. A. C. ; Grathwohl, P. ; Fowler, H. J. et al. / Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in soils, sediments and waters : achievements and results of the EU project AquaTerra : a review. In: Agronomy for Sustainable Development. 2009 ; Vol. 29, No. 1. pp. 161-173.

Bibtex

@article{8d3dbdd560a04471ae58c1e8e1173f74,
title = "Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in soils, sediments and waters : achievements and results of the EU project AquaTerra : a review.",
abstract = "AquaTerra is one of the first environmental projects within the 6th Framework program by the European Commission. It began in June 2004 with a multidisciplinary team of 45 partner organizations from 13 EU countries, Switzerland, Serbia, Romania and Montenegro. Results from sampling and modeling in 4 large river basins (Ebro, Danube, Elbe and Meuse) and one catchment of the Br{\'e}villes Spring in France led to new evaluations of diffuse and hotspot input of persistent organic and metal pollutants including dynamics of pesticides and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, as well as metal turnover and accumulation. While degradation of selected organic compounds could be demonstrated under controlled conditions in the laboratory, turnover of most persistent pollutants in the field seems to range from decades to centuries. First investigations of long-term cumulative and degradation effects, particularly in the context of climate change, have shown that it is also necessary to consider the predictions of more than one climate model when trying to assess future impacts. This is largely controlled by uncertainties in climate model responses. It is becoming evident, however, that changes to the climate will have important impacts on the diffusion and degradation of pollutants in space and time that are just at the start of their exploration.",
keywords = "contaminants / organic / inorganic / European river basins / climate change / sorption / biodegradation / soil / sediment / ground- and surface water / heavy metals / review / pesticides / atrazine / isoproturon / alkyphenol / acetochlor / chlortoluron / organochlorine / Br diphenyl ethers / drugs / TOF mass spectrometry / 87Sr",
author = "Barth, {J. A. C.} and P. Grathwohl and Fowler, {H. J.} and A. Bellin and Gerzabek, {M. H.} and Lair, {G. J.} and D. Barcel{\'o} and M. Petrovic and A. Navarro and Ph. N{\'e}grel and E. Petelet-Giraud and D. Darmendrail and H. Rijnaarts and A. Langenhoff and {de Weert}, J. and A. Slob and {van der Zaan}, {B. M.} and J. Gerritse and E. Frank and A. Gutierrez and R. Kretzschmar and T. Gocht and D. Steidle and F. Garrido and Jones, {Kevin C.} and Sandra Meijer and Claudia Moeckel and A. Marsman and G. Klaver and T. Vogel and C. B{\"u}rger and O. Kolditz and Broers, {H. P.} and N. Baran and J. Joziasse and {Von T{\"u}mpling}, W. and {Van Gaans}, P. and C. Merly and A. Chapman and S. Brouy{\`e}re and {Batlle Aguilar}, J. and Ph. Orban and N. Tas and H. Smidt",
note = "{\textcopyright} INRA, EDP Sciences 2008",
year = "2009",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1051/agro:2007060",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "161--173",
journal = "Agronomy for Sustainable Development",
issn = "1774-0746",
publisher = "Springer Science + Business Media",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Mobility, turnover and storage of pollutants in soils, sediments and waters : achievements and results of the EU project AquaTerra : a review.

AU - Barth, J. A. C.

AU - Grathwohl, P.

AU - Fowler, H. J.

AU - Bellin, A.

AU - Gerzabek, M. H.

AU - Lair, G. J.

AU - Barceló, D.

AU - Petrovic, M.

AU - Navarro, A.

AU - Négrel, Ph.

AU - Petelet-Giraud, E.

AU - Darmendrail, D.

AU - Rijnaarts, H.

AU - Langenhoff, A.

AU - de Weert, J.

AU - Slob, A.

AU - van der Zaan, B. M.

AU - Gerritse, J.

AU - Frank, E.

AU - Gutierrez, A.

AU - Kretzschmar, R.

AU - Gocht, T.

AU - Steidle, D.

AU - Garrido, F.

AU - Jones, Kevin C.

AU - Meijer, Sandra

AU - Moeckel, Claudia

AU - Marsman, A.

AU - Klaver, G.

AU - Vogel, T.

AU - Bürger, C.

AU - Kolditz, O.

AU - Broers, H. P.

AU - Baran, N.

AU - Joziasse, J.

AU - Von Tümpling, W.

AU - Van Gaans, P.

AU - Merly, C.

AU - Chapman, A.

AU - Brouyère, S.

AU - Batlle Aguilar, J.

AU - Orban, Ph.

AU - Tas, N.

AU - Smidt, H.

N1 - © INRA, EDP Sciences 2008

PY - 2009/1

Y1 - 2009/1

N2 - AquaTerra is one of the first environmental projects within the 6th Framework program by the European Commission. It began in June 2004 with a multidisciplinary team of 45 partner organizations from 13 EU countries, Switzerland, Serbia, Romania and Montenegro. Results from sampling and modeling in 4 large river basins (Ebro, Danube, Elbe and Meuse) and one catchment of the Brévilles Spring in France led to new evaluations of diffuse and hotspot input of persistent organic and metal pollutants including dynamics of pesticides and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, as well as metal turnover and accumulation. While degradation of selected organic compounds could be demonstrated under controlled conditions in the laboratory, turnover of most persistent pollutants in the field seems to range from decades to centuries. First investigations of long-term cumulative and degradation effects, particularly in the context of climate change, have shown that it is also necessary to consider the predictions of more than one climate model when trying to assess future impacts. This is largely controlled by uncertainties in climate model responses. It is becoming evident, however, that changes to the climate will have important impacts on the diffusion and degradation of pollutants in space and time that are just at the start of their exploration.

AB - AquaTerra is one of the first environmental projects within the 6th Framework program by the European Commission. It began in June 2004 with a multidisciplinary team of 45 partner organizations from 13 EU countries, Switzerland, Serbia, Romania and Montenegro. Results from sampling and modeling in 4 large river basins (Ebro, Danube, Elbe and Meuse) and one catchment of the Brévilles Spring in France led to new evaluations of diffuse and hotspot input of persistent organic and metal pollutants including dynamics of pesticides and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, as well as metal turnover and accumulation. While degradation of selected organic compounds could be demonstrated under controlled conditions in the laboratory, turnover of most persistent pollutants in the field seems to range from decades to centuries. First investigations of long-term cumulative and degradation effects, particularly in the context of climate change, have shown that it is also necessary to consider the predictions of more than one climate model when trying to assess future impacts. This is largely controlled by uncertainties in climate model responses. It is becoming evident, however, that changes to the climate will have important impacts on the diffusion and degradation of pollutants in space and time that are just at the start of their exploration.

KW - contaminants / organic / inorganic / European river basins / climate change / sorption / biodegradation / soil / sediment / ground- and surface water / heavy metals / review / pesticides / atrazine / isoproturon / alkyphenol / acetochlor / chlortoluron /

U2 - 10.1051/agro:2007060

DO - 10.1051/agro:2007060

M3 - Journal article

VL - 29

SP - 161

EP - 173

JO - Agronomy for Sustainable Development

JF - Agronomy for Sustainable Development

SN - 1774-0746

IS - 1

ER -