Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5751073 Science of The Total Environment 2017 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Trace elements (TE) in mosses proxy atmospheric deposition of anthropogenic origin.•Atmospheric deposition also includes a terrestrial fraction from soil erosion.•We studied how these sources and other parameters affected TE in mosses.•Anthropogenic and eroded soil deposition contributed to TE in mosses.•Moss species and the type of forest also affected TE in mosses.

Air pollution in trace elements (TE) remains a concern for public health in Europe. For this reasons, networks of air pollution concentrations or exposure are deployed, including a moss bio-monitoring programme in Europe. Spatial determinants of TE concentrations in mosses remain unclear. In this study, the French dataset of TE in mosses is analyzed by spatial autoregressive model to account for spatial structure of the data and several variables proven or suspected to affect TE concentrations in mosses. Such variables include source (atmospheric deposition and soil concentrations), protocol (sampling month, collector, and moss species), and environment (forest type and canopy density, distance to the coast or the highway, and elevation). Modeled atmospheric deposition was only available for Cd and Pb and was one of the main explanatory variables of the concentrations in mosses. Predicted soil content was also an important explanatory variable except for Cr, Ni, and Zn. However, the moss species was the main factor for all the studied TE. The other environmental variables affected differently the TE. In particular, the forest type and canopy density were important in most cases. These results stress the need for further research on the effect of the moss species on the capture and retention of TE, as well as for accounting for several variables and the spatial structure of the data in statistical analyses.

Graphical abstractDownload high-res image (305KB)Download full-size image

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Environmental Chemistry
Authors
, , , , , ,