Biomonitoring - an Effective Tool for Air Pollution Assessment
A special issue of Atmosphere (ISSN 2073-4433). This special issue belongs to the section "Air Quality".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (18 April 2023) | Viewed by 19601
Special Issue Editor
Interests: air quality; passive sampling; organic pollutants; aerosols; biomonitoring
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Air pollution involves a variety of contaminants issued from natural and synthetic sources and formed by the photochemical transformation process, including metals, volatile and non-volatile organic compounds, particulate matter, and gaseous products. Each of these can induce harmful effects on human health and the environment. The evaluation of air pollution is a challenge due to its importance for human health and the environment in general. The direct measurement of environmental contaminants needs a specific sampling method as well as a precise analytical procedure in order to collect and detect the total amount of emitted pollutants. Although the use of active sampling for environmental monitoring was the method of choice for many years due to its accuracy and efficiency, it suffers from many drawbacks—leading to the development and use of passive samplers. Among all passive samplers, the use of natural species remains the most efficient due to its availability, efficiency, and sensitivity to accumulated pollutants.
In this Special Issue, reviews or original research papers devoted to the use of biomonitors for the evaluation of air pollution can be submitted for potential publication.
All types of biomonitors (mosses, trees, needles, tree barks, snails, bees, honey, etc.) and pollutants (metals, volatile organic compounds, organic pollutants including POPS, pesticides, etc.) can be considered in terms of methodology, analytical development, long-duration studies, surveys, comparisons with other techniques (like active sampling), comparison between biomonitors, etc.
We look forward to receiving your submission.
Dr. Maurice Millet
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- biomonitoring
- air quality
- metals
- semi-volatiles organic compounds
- volatile organic compounds
- needles
- snails
- mosses
- tree barks
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