Sediments have a major role in ecosystem functioning but can also act as physical or chemical stressors. Anthropogenic activities may change the chemical constituency of sediments and the rate, frequency, and extent of sediment transport, deposition, and resuspension. The importance of sediments as stressors will depend on site ecosystem attributes and the magnitude and preponderance of co-occurring stressors. Contaminants are usually of greater ecological consequence in human-modified, depositional environments, where other anthropogenic stressors often co-occur. Risk assessments and restoration strategies should better consider the role of chemical contamination in the context of multiple stressors. There have been numerous advances in th...
Sediments act as a net sink for anthropogenic contaminants in marine ecosystems and contaminated sed...
International audience1. Dam presence is commonly associated with strong accumulation of polluted se...
Understanding the societal impacts of, and improving resilience in response to Earth surface process...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98149/1/etc2250-sm-0001-SuppTab-S1.pdfh...
Accurate characterization of risk of adverse ecological effects related to contaminated sediment pre...
Contaminated Sediments held in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA in January 2005. Management strategies fo...
Environmental pollution is traditionally classified as either localized or diffuse. Local pollution ...
Aquatic ecosystems are complex entities that are controlled and regulated by a multitude of physicoc...
Sediment evaluation and monitoring is an essential part of ecosystem monitoring since sediments repr...
Sediments are components of marine and estuarine ecosystems. Toxicants most often become sorbed to ...
We used field-derived data from streams in Nevada, USA, to quantify relationships between stream bio...
Healthy sediment communities are considered highly beneficial for aquatic ecosystem health. Sediment...
Coastal waterways are increasingly exposed to multiple stressors, e.g. contaminants that can be deli...
Shallow-water sediment systems are continuously exposed to a range of anthropogenic stressors, inclu...
Assessment of freshwater sediments can determine whether chemical concentrations are sufficient to c...
Sediments act as a net sink for anthropogenic contaminants in marine ecosystems and contaminated sed...
International audience1. Dam presence is commonly associated with strong accumulation of polluted se...
Understanding the societal impacts of, and improving resilience in response to Earth surface process...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98149/1/etc2250-sm-0001-SuppTab-S1.pdfh...
Accurate characterization of risk of adverse ecological effects related to contaminated sediment pre...
Contaminated Sediments held in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA in January 2005. Management strategies fo...
Environmental pollution is traditionally classified as either localized or diffuse. Local pollution ...
Aquatic ecosystems are complex entities that are controlled and regulated by a multitude of physicoc...
Sediment evaluation and monitoring is an essential part of ecosystem monitoring since sediments repr...
Sediments are components of marine and estuarine ecosystems. Toxicants most often become sorbed to ...
We used field-derived data from streams in Nevada, USA, to quantify relationships between stream bio...
Healthy sediment communities are considered highly beneficial for aquatic ecosystem health. Sediment...
Coastal waterways are increasingly exposed to multiple stressors, e.g. contaminants that can be deli...
Shallow-water sediment systems are continuously exposed to a range of anthropogenic stressors, inclu...
Assessment of freshwater sediments can determine whether chemical concentrations are sufficient to c...
Sediments act as a net sink for anthropogenic contaminants in marine ecosystems and contaminated sed...
International audience1. Dam presence is commonly associated with strong accumulation of polluted se...
Understanding the societal impacts of, and improving resilience in response to Earth surface process...