Anna K. Karjalainen
University of Jyväskylä
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Featured researches published by Anna K. Karjalainen.
Chemosphere | 1985
Jaakko Paasivirta; K. Heinola; Tarmo Humppi; Anna K. Karjalainen; Juha Knuutinen; Keijo Mäntykoski; Raija Paukku; T. Piilola; Kari Surma-Aho; Juhani Tarhanen; Leena Welling; H. Vihonen; Jukka Särkkä
Abstract Emissions, bioaccumulation and possible food chain enrichment of polychlorinated phenols, guaiacols and catechols have been studied by analyses of water, snow, ash, benthic animal, fish and bird samples in Finland. Seventeen individual compounds were analyzed using authentic reference model compounds and internal standard by GC/ECD. Although the enrichment potential of the studied compounds appeared to be lower than that of the chlorinated hydrocarbons, they proved to be very general pollutants and some of them showed specific bioaccumulation to certain species and high persistency thus forming environmental hazards.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2013
Anna K. Karjalainen; Anja Hallikainen; Tero Hirvonen; Hannu Kiviranta; Mikael Knip; Carina Kronberg-Kippilä; O. Leino; Olli Simell; Harri Sinkko; Jouni T. Tuomisto; Riitta Veijola; Eija-Riitta Venäläinen; Suvi M. Virtanen
Methylmercury (MeHg) is a well-known neurotoxic agent, and consumption of contaminated fish is the principal environmental source of MeHg exposure in humans. Children are more susceptible to adverse effects than adults. No previous specific data exist for intake by Finnish children of methylmercury from fish. We estimated fish consumption and MeHg intakes from species most commonly consumed by Finnish children aged 1-6 years. The total mercury concentrations were determined in fish species consumed, and age-specific methylmercury intakes were derived. We also examined safety margins and the proportion of children exceeding the tolerable daily intakes set by international expert bodies. The daily intake of MeHg ranged from 0 to 0.33 μg/kg bw. The strictest reference value 0.1 μg/kg bw/day for MeHg, proposed by USEPA, was exceeded by 1-15% of the study population, and FAO/WHO JECFA provisional tolerable weekly intake of 1.6 μg/kg bw was exceeded by 1% of boys and 2.5% of girls aged 6 years. Intakes of 1-year old girls were higher than of boys, whereas for 3-year olds they were the opposite. The highest intakes were observed for 6-year-old boys and girls. There was great variation in the estimated MeHg intakes among Finnish children.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2013
O. Leino; Anna K. Karjalainen; Jouni T. Tuomisto
Fish contains both beneficial substances e.g. docosahexaenoic acids but also harmful compounds e.g. methylmercury. Importantly, the health effects caused by these two substances can be evaluated in one common end point, intelligence quotient (IQ), providing a more transparent analysis. We estimated health effects of maternal fish consumption on childs central nervous system by creating a model with three alternative maternal fish consumption scenarios (lean fish, fatty fish, and current fish consumption). Additionally, we analyzed impacts of both regular fish consumption and extreme fish consumption habits. At the individual level, the simulated net effects were small, encompassing a range of one IQ point in all scenarios. Fatty fish consumption, however, clearly generated a beneficial net IQ effect, and lean fish consumption evoked an adverse net IQ effect. In view of the current fish consumption pattern of Finnish mothers the benefits and risks seem to more or less compensate each other. This study clearly shows the significance of which fish species are consumed during pregnancy and lactation, and the results can be generalized to apply to typical western population fish consumption habits.
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2017
Johanna Salmelin; Matti T. Leppänen; Anna K. Karjalainen; Kari-Matti Vuori; Almut Gerhardt; Heikki Hämäläinen
Mining of sulfide-rich pyritic ores produces acid mine drainage waters and has induced major ecological problems in aquatic ecosystems worldwide. Biomining utilizes microbes to extract metals from the ore, and it has been suggested as a new sustainable way to produce metals. However, little is known of the potential ecotoxicological effects of biomining. In the present study, biomining impacts were assessed using survival and behavioral responses of aquatic macroinvertebrates at in situ exposures in streams. The authors used an impedance conversion technique to measure quantitatively in situ behavioral responses of larvae of the regionally common mayfly, Heptagenia dalecarlica, to discharges from the Talvivaara mine (Sotkamo, Northern Finland), which uses a biomining technique. Behavioral responses measured in 3 mine-impacted streams were compared with those measured in 3 reference streams. In addition, 3-d survival of the mayfly larvae and the oligochaete Lumbriculus variegatus was measured in the study sites. Biomining impacts on stream water quality included increased concentrations of sulfur, sulfate, and metals, especially manganese, cadmium, zinc, sodium, and calcium. Survival of the invertebrates in the short term was not affected by the mine effluents. In contrast, apparent behavioral changes in mayfly larvae were detected, but these responses were not consistent among sites, which may reflect differing natural water chemistry of the study sites. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:147-155.
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2017
Hanna E. Arola; Juha Karjalainen; Eeva-Riikka Vehniäinen; Ari Väisänen; Jussi V. K. Kukkonen; Anna K. Karjalainen
European whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus) embryos and larvae were exposed to 6 different manganese sulfate (MnSO4 ) concentrations from fertilization to the 3-d-old larvae. The fertilization success, offspring survival, larval growth, yolk consumption, embryonic and larval Mn tissue concentrations, and transcript levels of detoxification-related genes were measured in the long-term incubation. A full factorial breeding design (4 females × 2 males) allowed examination of the significance of both female and male effects, as well as female-male interactions in conjunction with the MnSO4 exposure in terms of the observed endpoints. The MnSO4 exposure reduced the survival of the whitefish early life stages. The offspring MnSO4 tolerance also was affected by the female parent, and the female-specific mean lethal concentrations (LC50s) varied from 42.0 mg MnSO4 /L to 84.6 mg MnSO4 /L. The larval yolk consumption seemed slightly inhibited at the exposure concentration of 41.8 mg MnSO4 /L. The MnSO4 exposure caused a significant induction of metallothionein-A (mt-a) and metallothionein-B (mt-b) in the 3-d-old larvae, and at the exposure concentration of 41.8 mg MnSO4 /L the mean larval mt-a and mt-b expressions were 47.5% and 56.6% higher, respectively, than at the control treatment. These results illustrate that whitefish reproduction can be impaired in waterbodies that receive Mn and SO4 in concentrations substantially above the typical levels in boreal freshwaters, but the offspring tolerance can be significantly affected by the parents and in particular the female parent. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:1343-1353.
Science of The Total Environment | 2018
Jaana Wallin; Kari-Matti Vuori; Ari Väisänen; Johanna Salmelin; Anna K. Karjalainen
We assessed potential ecotoxicity of lake sediments affected by biomining effluents in northeastern Finland. Growth, reproduction and behavior of the sediment-dwelling oligochaete Lumbriculus variegatus (Müller 1774) were used as ecotoxicity endpoints. Standardized chronic bioassays were used for growth and reproduction, and acute and chronic tests with Multispecies Freshwater Biomonitor (MFB) for behavior assessments. Sequential extractions were used to characterize metal bioavailability and exposure conditions in the sediments, which indicated mining-induced contamination gradients of S, Cu, Ni and U and also bioavailability gradients of S and Ni. Among the ecotoxicity endpoints, growth and reproduction responses of the standard bioassays appeared more sensitive than the behavioral responses at 21 d. In the two most mining-affected test sediments, mean number of worms and dry biomass decreased 35-42% and 46-51% in comparison to the reference sediment, respectively. The behavioral changes of worms, i.e. peristaltic and overall locomotory activity, decreased on average 20-70% and 2-61% at 21 d in the same sediments. However, these behavioral changes were observed at the onset of exposure indicating MFB technique is a suitable and rapid screening level ecotoxicity assessment tool.
Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2018
Hanna E. Arola; Anna K. Karjalainen; Jukka Syrjänen; Maija Hannula; Ari Väisänen; Juha Karjalainen
The applicability of an in situ incubation method in monitoring the effects of metal mining on early life stages of fish was evaluated by investigating the impacts of a biomining technology utilizing mine on the mortality, growth, and yolk consumption of brown trout (Salmo trutta) and whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus) embryos. Newly fertilized eggs were incubated from autumn 2014 to spring 2015 in six streams under the influence of the mine located in North-Eastern Finland and in six reference streams. Although the impacted streams clearly had elevated concentrations of several metals and sulfate, the embryonic mortality of the two species did not differ between the impacted and the reference streams. Instead, particle accumulation to some cylinders had a significant impact on the embryonic mortality of both species. In clean cylinders, mortality was higher in streams with lower minimum pH. However, low pH levels were evident in both the reference and the mine-impacted groups. The embryonic growth of neither species was impacted by the mining activities, and the growth and yolk consumption of the embryos was mainly regulated by water temperature. Surprisingly, whitefish embryos incubated in streams with lower minimum pH had larger body size. In general, the applied in situ method is applicable in boreal streams for environmental assessment and monitoring, although in our study, we did not observe a specific mining impact differing from the effects of other environmental factors related to catchment characteristics.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2013
O. Leino; Hannu Kiviranta; Anna K. Karjalainen; Carina Kronberg-Kippilä; Harri Sinkko; Erik Huusfeldt Larsen; Suvi M. Virtanen; Jouni T. Tuomisto
Boreal Environment Research | 2006
Anna K. Karjalainen; Jari-Pekka J. Pääkkönen; Juha Karjalainen
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2016
Johanna Salmelin; Anna K. Karjalainen; Heikki Hämäläinen; Matti T. Leppänen; Hannu Kiviranta; Jussi V. K. Kukkonen; Kari-Matti Vuori