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  4. Network analysis to reveal the most commonly detected compounds in predator-prey pairs in freshwater and marine mammals and fish in Europe
 
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August 8, 2024
Journal Article
Title

Network analysis to reveal the most commonly detected compounds in predator-prey pairs in freshwater and marine mammals and fish in Europe

Abstract
Marine and freshwater mammalian predators and fish samples, retrieved from environmental specimen banks (ESBs), natural history museum (NHMs) and other scientific collections, were analysed by LIFE APEX partners for a wide range of legacy and emerging contaminants (2545 in total). Network analysis was used to visualize the chemical occurrence data and reveal the predominant chemical mixtures for the freshwater and marine envi ronments. For this purpose, a web tool was created to explore these chemical mixtures in predator-prey pairs.
Predominant chemicals, defined as the most prevalent substances detected in prey-predator pairs were identified through this innovative approach. The analysis established the most frequently co-occurring substances in chemical mixtures from AP&P in the marine and freshwater environments. Freshwater and marine environments shared 23 chemicals among their top 25 predominant chemicals. Legacy chemical, including per fluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS), brominated diphenyl ethers (BDEs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), hexa chlorobenzene and mercury were dominant chemicals in both environments. Furthermore, N acetylaminoantipyrine was a predominant pharmaceutical in both environments. The LIFE APEX chemical mixture application (https://norman-data.eu/LIFE_APEX_Mixtures) was proven to be useful to establish most prevalent compounds in terms of number of detected counts in prey-predator pairs. Nonetheless, further research is needed to establish food chain associations of the predominant chemicals.
Author(s)
Alygizakis, Nikiforos
Kostopoulou, Niki
Gkotsis, Georgios
Nika, Maria-Christina
Orfanioti, Anastasia
Ng, Kelsey
Bizani, Erasmia
Nikolopoulou, Varvara
Badry, Alexander
Brownlow, Andrew
Centelleghe, Cinzia
Chadwick, Elizabeth A.
Ciesielski, Tomasz M.
Cincinelli, Alessandra
Claßen, Daniela
Danielsson, Sara
Dekker, Rene W.R.J.
Duke, Guy
Glowacka, Natalia
Gol'din, Pavel
Jansman, Hugh A.H.
Jauniaux, Thierry
Knopf, Burkhard  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Molekularbiologie und Angewandte Oekologie IME  
Koschorreck, Jan
Krone, Oliver
Lekube, Xabier
Martellini, Tania
Movalli, Paola
O'Rourke, Emily
Oswald, Peter
Oswaldova, Martina
Saavedra, Camilo
Persson, Sara
Rohner, Simon
Roos, Anna
Routti, Heli
Schmidt, Britta
Sciancalepore, Giuseppe
Siebert, Ursula
Treu, Gabriele
van den Brink, Nico W.
Vishnyakova, Karina
Walker, Lee Anthony
Thomaidis, Nikolaos S.
Slobodnik, Jaroslav
Journal
Science of the Total Environment  
Open Access
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175303
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Molekularbiologie und Angewandte Oekologie IME  
Fraunhofer Group
Fraunhofer-Verbund Ressourcentechnologien und Bioökonomie  
Keyword(s)
  • Chemical mixtures

  • Network analysis visualization

  • Top predators

  • Freshwater ecosystem

  • Marine ecosystem

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