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Featured researches published by Bj Goldsmith.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Hexabromocyclododecanes, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, and polychlorinated biphenyls in radiometrically dated sediment cores from English lakes, ~1950-present.

Congqiao Yang; Neil L. Rose; Simon Turner; Handong Yang; Bj Goldsmith; Sara Losada; Jonathan L. Barber; Stuart Harrad

This paper reports input fluxes between ~1950 and present, of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), and hexabromocyclododecanes (HBCDs) in radiometrically-dated sediment cores from 7 English lakes. Fluxes of PCBs at all but one location prone to significant sediment resuspension peaked in the late-1960s/early-1990s, before declining thereafter. Input fluxes of HBCDs at all sites increased from first emergence in the mid-1960s. Thereafter, fluxes peaked in the late-1980s/early-2000s, before declining through to the present, except at the most urban site where HBCD fluxes are still increasing. Trends of PBDEs predominant in the Penta-BDE and Octa-BDE formulations vary between sites. While at some locations, fluxes peaked in the late-1990s/early-2000s; at others, fluxes are still increasing. This suggests the full impact of EU restrictions on these formulations has yet to be felt. Fluxes of BDE-209 have yet to peak at all except one location, suggesting little discernible environmental response to recent EU restrictions on the Deca-BDE product. Strikingly, fluxes of BDE-209 in the most recent core slices either exceed or approach peak fluxes of ΣPCBs, implying substantial UK use of Deca-BDE. Excepting HBCDs, inventories of our target contaminants correlated significantly with local population density, implying substantial urban sources.


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2014

Big Ben: a new wide-bore piston corer for multi-proxy palaeolimnology

Ian R. Patmore; Carl D. Sayer; Bj Goldsmith; Thomas A. Davidson; R Rawcliffe; Jorge Salgado

We present a design for a large diameter piston corer, deployed from a raft that is suitable for use in shallow lakes. The piston corer, known as Big Ben, consists of a core tube, a piston on a rope and a corer head, to which rods are attached to drive the tube into the sediment. A core catcher, which aids the support of the core tube when full of sediment, has been incorporated into the design. To extrude the sediment, a framework has been designed to keep the core tube upright and stationary and a modified bottle jack is used to push the piston upwards during the extrusion process. The practical operation of the Big Ben coring system from setting up a coring platform to collecting and safely extruding a core is detailed. Finally we summarise recent experiences of deploying the corer and highlight its potential uses in the developing field of multi-proxy palaeolimnology.


Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution | 2015

Assessing degradation and recovery pathways in lakes impacted by eutrophication using the sediment record

H Bennion; Gavin Simpson; Bj Goldsmith

Efforts to restore enriched lakes have increased yet there remains uncertainty about whether restoration targets can be achieved and over what timescale. Paleoecological techniques, principally diatom analyses, were used to examine the degree of impact and recovery in 12 European lakes subject to eutrophication and subsequent reduction in nutrient loading. Dissimilarity scores showed that all sites experienced progressive deviation from the reference sample (core bottom) prior to nutrient reduction, and principal curves indicated gradual compositional change with enrichment. When additive models were applied to the latter, the changes were statistically significant in 9 of the 12 sites. Shifts in diatom composition following reduction in nutrient loading were more equivocal, with a reversal towards the reference flora seen only in four of the deep lakes and one of the shallow lakes. Of these, only two were significant (Lake Bled and Mjosa). Alternative nutrient sources seem to explain the lack of apparent recovery in the other deep lakes. In three shallow lakes diatom assemblages were replaced by a community associated with lower productivity but not the one seen prior to enrichment. Internal loading and top down control may influence recovery in shallow lakes and climate change may have confounded recovery in several of the study sites. Hence, ecosystem recovery is not simply a reversal of the degradation pathway and may take several decades to complete or, for some lakes, may not take place at all. By assessing ecological change over a decadal to centennial timescale, the study highlights the important role that paleolimnology can play in establishing a benchmark against which managers can evaluate the degree to which their restoration efforts are successful.


Chemosphere | 2014

Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in English freshwater lakes, 2008-2012.

Congqiao Yang; Stuart Harrad; Mohamed Abou-Elwafa Abdallah; Jennifer Desborough; Neil L. Rose; Simon Turner; Thomas A. Davidson; Bj Goldsmith

Concentrations of tri-to-hexa-BDEs were determined in water samples taken from 9 English lakes on 13 occasions between April 2008 and February 2012. Across all sites, concentrations of ΣBDEs in individual samples ranged from 9.2 to 171.5pgL(-)(1), with an average of 61.9pgL(-)(1). Notwithstanding the far greater use of the Penta-BDE commercial formulation in the USA, concentrations in this study are comparable to the limited data available for the Great Lakes. PBDE concentrations showed no evidence of a decline at any monitored location over the study period. This may be because this study commenced 4years after the introduction of restrictions on the Penta- and Octa-BDE formulations. While concentrations normalised to water volume at the different locations were statistically indistinguishable; significant spatial variation was apparent when the data were normalised to total suspended solids (TSS) content. However, this spatial variation was not correlated with factors such as population density and lake catchment area, suggesting that concentrations of PBDEs in lake water in this study are a complex integral of numerous factors. BDE-47:99 ratios and concentrations of ΣBDEs respectively decreased and increased significantly with increasing TSS content. As TSS content was elevated in colder compared with warmer periods, such seasonal variation in TSS content appears a major contributor to the observed elevation of ΣBDE concentrations in colder periods, and higher BDE-47:99 ratios in warmer periods.


Archive | 2011

WISER Deliverable D3.2-3: Report on the most suitable lake macrophyte based assessment methods for impacts of eutrophication and water level fluctuations

Agnieszka Kolada; Seppo Hellsten; Martin Søndergaard; Marit Mjelde; Bernard Dudley; Gerben van Geest; Bj Goldsmith; Thomas A. Davidson; H Bennion; Peeter Nõges; Vincent Bertrin


BMC Ecology | 2016

Quality control in public participation assessments of water quality: the OPAL Water Survey.

Neil L. Rose; Simon Turner; Bj Goldsmith; Laura Gosling; Thomas A. Davidson


Journal of Paleolimnology | 2018

Sedimentary macrofossil records reveal ecological change in English lakes: implications for conservation

H Bennion; Carl D. Sayer; Stewart J. Clarke; Thomas A. Davidson; Neil L. Rose; Bj Goldsmith; R Rawcliffe; A Burgess; G Clarke; Simon Turner; Emma Wiik


Ecosphere | 2018

Eutrophication homogenizes shallow lake macrophyte assemblages over space and time

Jorge Salgado; Carl D. Sayer; Stephen J. Brooks; Thomas A. Davidson; Bj Goldsmith; Ian R. Patmore; Ambroise G. Baker; Beth Okamura


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2017

Using public participation to sample trace metals in lake surface sediments: the OPAL Metals Survey

Simon Turner; Neil L. Rose; Bj Goldsmith; Jenny Bearcock; C. Scheib; Handong Yang


Environmental Change Research Centre, University College London: London. | 2015

DOE NIEA Standing Fresh Water Monitoring of Special Areas of Conservation (SAC) and Areas Special Scientific Interest (ASSI) (Second Round). P_12324

Bj Goldsmith; S Dowman; S Goodrich; Em Shilland; Jd Shilland

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H Bennion

University College London

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Em Shilland

University College London

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Carl D. Sayer

University College London

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Simon Turner

University College London

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Neil L. Rose

University College London

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A Burgess

University College London

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Jd Shilland

University College London

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Jorge Salgado

University College London

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Handong Yang

University College London

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