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1000 Titel
  • Effects of climate change on marine dumped munitions and possible consequence for inhabiting biota
1000 Autor/in
  1. Scharsack, Jörn Peter |
  2. Koske, Daniel |
  3. Straumer, Katharina |
  4. Kammann, Ulrike |
1000 Erscheinungsjahr 2021
1000 Publikationstyp
  1. Artikel |
1000 Online veröffentlicht
  • 2021-08-28
1000 Erschienen in
1000 Quellenangabe
  • 33(1):102
1000 Copyrightjahr
  • 2021
1000 Lizenz
1000 Verlagsversion
  • https://doi.org/10.1186/s12302-021-00537-4 |
1000 Publikationsstatus
1000 Sprache der Publikation
1000 Abstract/Summary
  • Marine environments are contaminated with enormous amounts of warfare agents due to military activity and exercise, and the disposal of unused ordnance. Due to corrosion of munition shells, substances are leaking from the warfare materials into the environment. It has to be expected that climate change will influence munition corrosion and distribution of their content. Although there is no doubt about the principle toxicity of many of the munition compounds, including their transformation/degradation products, the impact of munition compounds on marine environments, including their biota are yet only at the beginning to be understood. Recently the intake of munition compounds has been confirmed in mussels and fish collected from contaminated areas. It has become clear that dumped munitions are a continuous source of toxic substances leaking into the environment and that ongoing corrosion will worsen the problem. The present review intends to evaluate the available literature on how climate change might influence the contamination of marine environments and inhabiting biota with munition compounds. Direct testing (or modelling) of climate change scenarios in the context of the marine munition problems has yet not been undertaken. Nevertheless, it can be predicted that climate change effects such as rising temperature and higher frequencies of extreme weather events will accelerate the rates at which disposed ordnance corrodes and consequently accelerate the rate at which munition compounds are leaking out. Climate change will cause elevated stress to biota, ranging from temperature stress and lower availability of oxygen to shifts in salinity and pH. In combination, elevated release of munition related compounds and elevated environmental stress, will put biota under threat, in particular in areas with high munition contamination and limited water exchange, such as the Baltic Sea. On a positive side, biodegradation of organic munition compounds by biota and microorganisms is likely to be accelerated with rising temperature.
1000 Sacherschließung
lokal Corrosion
lokal Climate change
lokal Pollution
lokal Munition compounds
lokal Review
lokal Biota
lokal Temperature
lokal TNT
1000 Liste der Beteiligten
  1. https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4291-6853|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/S29za2UsIERhbmllbA==|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/U3RyYXVtZXIsIEthdGhhcmluYQ==|https://frl.publisso.de/adhoc/uri/S2FtbWFubiwgVWxyaWtl
1000 Hinweis
  • DeepGreen-ID: a6888994619d4b599f2f1172dab4de14 ; metadata provieded by: DeepGreen (https://www.oa-deepgreen.de/api/v1/), LIVIVO search scope life sciences (http://z3950.zbmed.de:6210/livivo), Crossref Unified Resource API (https://api.crossref.org/swagger-ui/index.html), to.science.api (https://frl.publisso.de/), ZDB JSON-API (beta) (https://zeitschriftendatenbank.de/api/), lobid - Dateninfrastruktur für Bibliotheken (https://lobid.org/resources/search)
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1000 @id frl:6442328.rdf
1000 Erstellt am 2023-04-26T13:56:39.542+0200
1000 Erstellt von 322
1000 beschreibt frl:6442328
1000 Zuletzt bearbeitet Thu Oct 19 12:21:57 CEST 2023
1000 Objekt bearb. Thu Oct 19 12:21:57 CEST 2023
1000 Vgl. frl:6442328
1000 Oai Id
  1. oai:frl.publisso.de:frl:6442328 |
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