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Dive into the research topics where Carmela Chateau is active.

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Featured researches published by Carmela Chateau.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Wild Brown Trout Affected by Historical Mining in the Cévennes National Park, France

Fabrice Monna; Estelle Camizuli; P. Revelli; C. Biville; C. Thomas; Rémi Losno; Renaud Scheifler; Olivier Bruguier; Sandrine Baron; Carmela Chateau; Alain Ploquin; Paul Alibert

In the protected area of the Cévennes National Park (Southern France), 114 wild brown trout (Salmo trutta fario) were captured at six locations affected to different extents by historical mining and metallurgy dating from the Iron Age to Modern Times. Cadmium and lead in trout livers and muscles reflect high sediment contamination, although an age-related effect was also detected for hepatic metal concentrations. Lead isotope signatures confirm exposure to drainage from mining and metallurgical waste. Developmental instability, assessed by fluctuating asymmetry, is significantly correlated with cadmium and lead concentrations in trout tissues, suggesting that local contamination may have affected fish development. Nowadays, the area is among the least industrialized in France. However, our results show that 60% of the specimens at one site exceed EU maximum allowed cadmium or lead concentration in foodstuffs. The mining heritage should not be neglected when establishing strategies for long-term environmental management.


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2009

Modeling of 137Cs migration in soils using an 80-year soil archive: role of fertilizers and agricultural amendments

Fabrice Monna; F. van Oort; P. Hubert; Janusz Dominik; J. Bolte; Jean-Luc Loizeau; Jérôme Labanowski; J. Lamri; Christophe Petit; G. Le Roux; Carmela Chateau

An 80-year soil archive, the 42-plot experimental design at the INRA in Versailles (France), is used here to study long-term contamination by 137Cs atmospheric deposition and the fate of this radioisotope when associated with various agricultural practices: fallow land, KCl, NH4(NO3), superphosphate fertilizers, horse manure and lime amendments. The pertinence of a simple box model, where radiocaesium is supposed to move downward by convectional mechanisms, is checked using samples from control plots which had been neither amended, nor cultivated since 1928. This simple model presents the advantage of depending on only two parameters: alpha, a proportional factor allowing the historical atmospheric 137Cs fluxes to be reconstructed locally, and k, an annual loss coefficient from the plow horizon. Another pseudo-unknown is however necessary to run the model: the shape of historical 137Cs deposition, but this function can be easily computed by merging several curves previously established by other surveys. A loss of approximately 1.5% per year from the plow horizon, combined with appropriate fluxes, provides good concordance between simulated and measured values. In the 0-25cm horizon, the residence half time is found to be approximately 18yr (including both migration and radioactive decay). Migration rate constants are also calculated for some plots receiving continuous long-term agricultural treatments. Comparison with the control plots reveals significant influence of amendments on 137Cs mobility in these soils developed from a unique genoform.


Environmental Research | 2014

Impact of trace metals from past mining on the aquatic ecosystem: a multi-proxy approach in the Morvan (France).

Estelle Camizuli; Fabrice Monna; Renaud Scheifler; Philippe Amiotte-Suchet; Rémi Losno; P. Beis; Benjamin Bohard; Carmela Chateau; Paul Alibert

This study seeks to determine to what extent trace metals resulting from past mining activities are transferred to the aquatic ecosystem, and whether such trace metals still exert deleterious effects on biota. Concentrations of Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn were measured in streambed sediments, transplanted bryophytes and wild brown trout. This study was conducted at two scales: (i) the entire Morvan Regional Nature Park and (ii) three small watersheds selected for their degree of contamination, based on the presence or absence of past mining sites. The overall quality of streambed sediments was assessed using Sediment Quality Indices (SQIs). According to these standard guidelines, more than 96% of the sediments sampled should not represent a threat to biota. Nonetheless, in watersheds where past mining occurred, SQIs are significantly lower. Transplanted bryophytes at these sites consistently present higher trace metal concentrations. For wild brown trout, the scaled mass and liver indices appear to be negatively correlated with liver Pb concentrations, but there are no obvious relationships between past mining and liver metal concentrations or the developmental instability of specimens. Although the impact of past mining and metallurgical works is apparently not as strong as that usually observed in modern mining sites, it is still traceable. For this reason, past mining sites should be monitored, particularly in protected areas erroneously thought to be free of anthropogenic contamination.


SpringerPlus | 2016

Impact of nickel mining in New Caledonia assessed by compositional data analysis of lichens

Camille Pasquet; Pauline Le Monier; Fabrice Monna; Christophe Durlet; Benjamin Brigaud; Rémi Losno; Carmela Chateau; Christine Laporte-Magoni; Peggy Gunkel-Grillon

The aim of this study is to explore the use of lichens as biomonitors of the impact of nickel mining and ore treatment on the atmosphere in the New Caledonian archipelago (South Pacific Ocean); both activities emitting also Co, Cr and possibly Fe. Metal contents were analysed in thirty-four epiphytic lichens, collected in the vicinity of the potential sources, and in places free from known historical mining. The highest Ni, Co, and Cr concentrations were, as expected, observed in lichens collected near ore deposits or treatment areas. The elemental composition in the lichens was explored by multivariate analysis, after appropriately transforming the variables (i.e. using compositional data analysis). The sample score of the first principal component (PC1) makes the largest (positive) multiplicative contribution to the log-ratios of metals originating from mining activities (Ni, Cr, Co) divided by Ti. The PC1 scores are used here as a surrogate of pollution levels related to mining and metallurgical activity. They can be viewed as synthetic indicators mapped to provide valuable information for the management and protection of ecosystems or, as a first step, to select locations where air filtration units could be installed, in the future, for air quality monitoring. However, as this approach drastically simplifies the problem, supplying a broadly efficient picture but little detail, recognizing the different sources of contamination may be difficult, more particularly when their chemical differences are subtle. It conveys only relative information: about ratios, not levels, and is therefore recommended as a preliminary step, in combination with close examination of raw concentration levels of lichens. Further validation using conventional air-monitoring by filter units should also prove beneficial.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Trace metals from historical mining sites and past metallurgical activity remain bioavailable to wildlife today.

Estelle Camizuli; Renaud Scheifler; Stéphane Garnier; Fabrice Monna; Rémi Losno; Claude Gourault; Gilles Hamm; Caroline Lachiche; Guillaume Delivet; Carmela Chateau; Paul Alibert

Throughout history, ancient human societies exploited mineral resources all over the world, even in areas that are now protected and considered to be relatively pristine. Here, we show that past mining still has an impact on wildlife in some French protected areas. We measured cadmium, copper, lead, and zinc concentrations in topsoils and wood mouse kidneys from sites located in the Cévennes and the Morvan. The maximum levels of metals in these topsoils are one or two orders of magnitude greater than their commonly reported mean values in European topsoils. The transfer to biota was effective, as the lead concentration (and to a lesser extent, cadmium) in wood mouse kidneys increased with soil concentration, unlike copper and zinc, providing direct evidence that lead emitted in the environment several centuries ago is still bioavailable to free-ranging mammals. The negative correlation between kidney lead concentration and animal body condition suggests that historical mining activity may continue to play a role in the complex relationships between trace metal pollution and body indices. Ancient mining sites could therefore be used to assess the long-term fate of trace metals in soils and the subsequent risks to human health and the environment.


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2017

Perturbation vectors to evaluate air quality using lichens and bromeliads: a Brazilian case study

Fabrice Monna; A. N. Marques; R. Guillon; Rémi Losno; S. Couette; Nicolas Navarro; Gaetano Dongarra; E. Tamburo; Daniela Varrica; Carmela Chateau; F.O. Nepomuceno

Samples of one lichen species, Parmotrema crinitum, and one bromeliad species, Tillandsia usneoides, were collected in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at four sites differently affected by anthropogenic pollution. The concentrations of aluminum, cadmium, copper, iron, lanthanum, lead, sulfur, titanium, zinc, and zirconium were determined by inductively coupled plasma–atomic emission spectroscopy. The environmental diagnosis was established by examining compositional changes via perturbation vectors, an underused family of methods designed to circumvent the problem of closure in any compositional dataset. The perturbation vectors between the reference site and the other three sites were similar for both species, although body concentration levels were different. At each site, perturbation vectors between lichens and bromeliads were approximately the same, whatever the local pollution level. It should thus be possible to combine these organisms, though physiologically different, for air quality surveys, after making all results comparable with appropriate correction. The use of perturbation vectors seems particularly suitable for assessing pollution level by biomonitoring, and for many frequently met situations in environmental geochemistry, where elemental ratios are more relevant than absolute concentrations.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2004

History and Environmental Impact of Mining Activity in Celtic Aeduan Territory Recorded in a Peat Bog (Morvan, France)

Fabrice Monna; Christophe Petit; Jean-Paul Guillaumet; Isabelle Jouffroy-Bapicot; Blanchot C; Janusz Dominik; Rémi Losno; Hervé Richard; Lévêque J; Carmela Chateau


Science of The Total Environment | 2004

Environmental impact of early Basque mining and smelting recorded in a high ash minerogenic peat deposit

Fabrice Monna; Didier Galop; Laurent Carozza; Magali Tual; Argitxu Beyrie; Fabrice Marembert; Carmela Chateau; Janus Dominik; F. E. Grousset


Environmental Science & Technology | 2004

Modeling Lead Input and Output in Soils Using Lead Isotopic Geochemistry

Réda M. Semlali; J.-B. Dessogne; Fabrice Monna; J. Bolte; S. Azimi; N. Navarro; L. Denaix; Michel Loubet; Carmela Chateau; F. van Oort


Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2010

Historical mining and smelting in the Vosges Mountains (France) recorded in two ombrotrophic peat bogs

Benoît Forel; Fabrice Monna; Christophe Petit; Olivier Bruguier; Rémi Losno; P. Fluck; Carole Bégeot; Hervé Richard; Vincent Bichet; Carmela Chateau

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Maréva Gabillot

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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