TY - JOUR
T1 - Will “Air Eutrophication” Increase the Risk of Ecological Threat to Public Health?
AU - Sun, Yan Feng
AU - Guo, Yuming
AU - Xu, Chi
AU - Liu, Ying
AU - Zhao, Xu
AU - Liu, Qian
AU - Jeppesen, Erik
AU - Wang, Haijun
AU - Xie, Ping
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Prof. Hans W. Paerl for his editorial contribution and valuable comments and Anne Mette Poulsen for English editions. This research was supported by the Yunnan Provincial Department of Science and Technology (202001BB050078; 202103AC100001). H.W. was supported by the Youth Innovation Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences as an excellent member (Y201859). E.J. was supported by the TÜBITAK program BIDEB 2232 (project 118C250). Y.G. was supported by the Career Development Fellowship (number APP1163693) and Leader Fellowship (number APP2008813) of the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council. C.X. was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 32061143014) and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
PY - 2023/7/25
Y1 - 2023/7/25
N2 - Aquatic eutrophication, often with anthropogenic causes, facilitates blooms of cyanobacteria including cyanotoxin producing species, which profoundly impact aquatic ecosystems and human health. An emerging concern is that aquatic eutrophication may interact with other environmental changes and thereby lead to unexpected cascading effects on terrestrial systems. Here, we synthesize recent evidence showing the possibility that accelerating eutrophication will spill over from aquatic ecosystems to the atmosphere via “air eutrophication”, a novel concept that refers to a process promoting the growth of airborne algae, some of them with the capacity to produce toxic compounds for humans and other organisms. Being catalyzed by various anthropogenic forcings─including aquatic eutrophication, climate warming, air contamination, and artificial light at night─accelerated air eutrophication may be expected in the future, posing a potentially increasing risk of threat to public health and the environment. So far knowledge of this topic is sparse, and we therefore consider air eutrophication a potentially important research field and propose an agenda of cross-discipline research. As a contribution, we have calculated a tolerable daily intake of 17 ng m-3 day-1 for the nasal intake of microcystins by humans.
AB - Aquatic eutrophication, often with anthropogenic causes, facilitates blooms of cyanobacteria including cyanotoxin producing species, which profoundly impact aquatic ecosystems and human health. An emerging concern is that aquatic eutrophication may interact with other environmental changes and thereby lead to unexpected cascading effects on terrestrial systems. Here, we synthesize recent evidence showing the possibility that accelerating eutrophication will spill over from aquatic ecosystems to the atmosphere via “air eutrophication”, a novel concept that refers to a process promoting the growth of airborne algae, some of them with the capacity to produce toxic compounds for humans and other organisms. Being catalyzed by various anthropogenic forcings─including aquatic eutrophication, climate warming, air contamination, and artificial light at night─accelerated air eutrophication may be expected in the future, posing a potentially increasing risk of threat to public health and the environment. So far knowledge of this topic is sparse, and we therefore consider air eutrophication a potentially important research field and propose an agenda of cross-discipline research. As a contribution, we have calculated a tolerable daily intake of 17 ng m-3 day-1 for the nasal intake of microcystins by humans.
KW - air eutrophication
KW - airborne algae
KW - microcystins
KW - public health
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85165720125
U2 - 10.1021/acs.est.3c01368
DO - 10.1021/acs.est.3c01368
M3 - Review Article
C2 - 37428654
AN - SCOPUS:85165720125
SN - 0013-936X
VL - 57
SP - 10512
EP - 10520
JO - Environmental Science and Technology
JF - Environmental Science and Technology
IS - 29
ER -