Harri Kankaanpää
Finnish Environment Institute
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Featured researches published by Harri Kankaanpää.
FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2011
Kaisa Koskinen; Jenni Hultman; Lars Paulin; Petri Auvinen; Harri Kankaanpää
The Baltic Sea is a large, shallow, and strongly stratified brackish water basin. It suffers from eutrophication, toxic cyanobacterial blooms, and oxygen depletion, all of which pose a threat to local marine communities. In this study, the diversity and community structure of the northern Baltic Sea bacterial communities in the water column were, for the first time, thoroughly studied by 454 sequencing. The spring and autumn bacterial communities were one order of magnitude less diverse than those in recently studied oceanic habitats. Patchiness and strong stratification were clearly detectable; <1% of operational taxonomic units were shared among 11 samples. The community composition was more uniform horizontally (at a fixed depth) between different sites than vertically within one sampling site, implying that the community structure was affected by prevailing physical and hydrochemical conditions. Taxonomic affiliations revealed a total of 23 bacterial classes and 169 genera, while 5% of the sequences remained unclassified. The cyanobacteria accounted for <2% of the sequences, and potentially toxic cyanobacterial genera were essentially absent during the sampling seasons.
Science of The Total Environment | 2012
Jukka Lehto; Tero Räty; Xiaolin Hou; Jussi Paatero; Ala Aldahan; Göran Possnert; Juha Flinkman; Harri Kankaanpää
Concentrations of the very long-lived fission product (129)I and stable iodine ((127)I) in the Baltic Sea and lake and rain waters from Finland, were measured as well as their occurrence as iodide (I(-)) and iodate (IO(3)(-)). The highest concentrations of both (127)I and (129)I occurred in sea water, on average 11.1 ± 4.3 μg/l and 3.9 ± 4.1 × 10(-9) at/l. In rain and lake waters the concentration of (129)I was more or less identical and almost one order of magnitude lower than in sea water. Based on these observations, and data from the literature, it is assumed that the source of (129)I in lakes is precipitation and the major source in the Baltic Sea is the inflow of sea water from the North Sea through the Danish Straits. The concentration of (129)I in the Baltic Sea has increased by a factor of six during ten years from 1999. In all studied water types the main chemical form of both iodine isotopes was iodide; in sea and lake waters by 92-96% and in rain water by 75-88%. Compared to (127)I the fraction of iodide was slightly higher in case of (129)I in all waters.
Toxicon | 2014
Raisa Turja; Laura Guimarães; Anna Nevala; Harri Kankaanpää; Samuli Korpinen; Kari K. Lehtonen
The Baltic Sea suffers from extensive blooms of the toxic cyanobacteria Nodularia spumigena that produces nodularin toxin (NOD). Additionally, intensification of oil transportation and related activities in the area increase the risk of oil spills. The current experiment was designed to mimic a situation where an oil spill occurs during a cyanobacterial bloom by exposing the amphipod Gammarus oceanicus to a NOD-rich cyanobacterial extract and the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon compound benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P), a common constituent of oil. The activity of the antioxidant enzymes glutathione S-transferase (GST), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), catalase (CAT) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) were examined after 48 and 96 h of exposure. Exposure to low and high levels of the NOD-rich extract produced a time-dependent activation of GST, GPx and SOD. CAT levels were elevated only by high NOD treatment. Also the toxicity of B[a]P was indicated by significantly elevated antioxidant response. In the combined exposures treatment-dependent additive increases in the activity of GPx and SOD were observed as well as inhibitory (antagonistic) effects on GST, CAT and GPx. Rapid concentration-dependent accumulation of NOD by G. oceanicus was observed. The addition of B[a]P reduced the accumulation of NOD and resulted in different biomarker response patterns compared to single exposures demonstrating the effects of mixture toxicity.
Hydrobiologia | 2014
Outi Setälä; Sari Lehtinen; Anke Kremp; Päivi Hakanen; Harri Kankaanpää; Katrin Erler; Sanna Suikkanen
Bioaccumulation of paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs) produced by the dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii was investigated in the northern Baltic Sea. The study was based on the assumption that the toxins released during high magnitude blooms of A. ostenfeldii will accumulate in the biota at the bloom site, especially in bivalves. To test this, experiments with blue mussels (Mytilus trossulus) exposed to toxic A. ostenfeldii in field conditions were carried out together with a field survey aimed to quantify natural distribution of PSTs in the biota. As hypothesized, PSTs accumulated in the tissues of the blue mussels during the incubations. Toxins were also detected in natural bivalve communities at the bloom site, the highest toxin concentrations found in the small Cerastoderma glaucum individuals, exceeding the EC safety limit for shellfish consumption. Relatively high total toxin concentrations were also detected from fish (Perca fluviatilis). These are the first records of PST transfer in the food web of the northern Baltic Sea.
Chemosphere | 2013
Markku Korhonen; Simo Salo; Harri Kankaanpää; Hannu Kiviranta; Päivi Ruokojärvi; Matti Verta
Sediment trap material was collected during May-December in the period 1996-2008 in three coastal areas and four open sea stations in the Finnish territory of the Baltic Sea. The highest sedimentation of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) with a typical source-related congener profile from chlorophenol production dominated by highly chlorinated dibenzofurans was found close to a historical source in the Kymijoki estuary. This was an order of magnitude higher than in other river estuaries and two orders of magnitude higher than in the open sea stations. The sedimentation of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) was also higher in river estuaries than in other areas. No significant decrease over a 12 year period of monitoring was found in concentration or in sedimentation in the Kymijoki estuary. In the western Gulf of Finland, the Archipelago Sea and the Gulf of Bothnia, the dominating congeners, calculated as toxic equivalent (TEQ) in sedimentation were 1, 2, 3, 7, 8-PeCDD and 2, 3, 4, 7, 8-PeCDF, often reported as the main congeners in deposition.
Toxins | 2015
Kirsi Harju; Marja-Leena Rapinoja; Marc-André Avondet; Werner Arnold; Martin Schär; Werner Luginbühl; Anke Kremp; Sanna Suikkanen; Harri Kankaanpää; Stephen Burrell; Martin Söderström; Paula Vanninen
A saxitoxin (STX) proficiency test (PT) was organized as part of the Establishment of Quality Assurance for the Detection of Biological Toxins of Potential Bioterrorism Risk (EQuATox) project. The aim of this PT was to provide an evaluation of existing methods and the European laboratories’ capabilities for the analysis of STX and some of its analogues in real samples. Homogenized mussel material and algal cell materials containing paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) toxins were produced as reference sample matrices. The reference material was characterized using various analytical methods. Acidified algal extract samples at two concentration levels were prepared from a bulk culture of PSP toxins producing dinoflagellate Alexandrium ostenfeldii. The homogeneity and stability of the prepared PT samples were studied and found to be fit-for-purpose. Thereafter, eight STX PT samples were sent to ten participating laboratories from eight countries. The PT offered the participating laboratories the possibility to assess their performance regarding the qualitative and quantitative detection of PSP toxins. Various techniques such as official Association of Official Analytical Chemists (AOAC) methods, immunoassays, and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry were used for sample analyses.
Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management | 2010
Harri Kankaanpää
Intent. The intent of Learned Discourses is to provide a forum for open discussion. These articles reflect the professional opinions of the authors regarding scientific issues. They do not represent SETAC positions or policies. And, although they are subject to editorial review for clarity, consistency, and brevity, these articles are not peer reviewed. The Learned Discourses date from 1996 in the North America SETAC News and, when that publication was replaced by the SETAC Globe, continued there through 2005. The continued success of Learned Discourses depends on our contributors. We encourage timely submissions that will inform and stimulate discussion. We expect that many of the articles will address controversial topics, and promise to give dissenting opinions a chance to be heard. Rules. All submissions must be succinct: no longer than 1000 words, no more than 6 references, and at most one table or figure. Reference format must follow the journal requirement found on the Internet at http:// www.setacjournals.org. Topics must fall within IEAM’s sphere of interest. Submissions. All manuscripts should be sent via email as Word attachments to Peter M Chapman ([email protected]).
Harmful Algae | 2012
Päivi Hakanen; Sanna Suikkanen; Johan Franzén; Helene Franzén; Harri Kankaanpää; Anke Kremp
Environmental Pollution | 2015
Ieva Barda; Harri Kankaanpää; Ingrida Purina; Maija Balode; Olli Sjövall; Jussi Meriluoto
Archive | 2011
Outi Setälä; Sanna Sopanen; Riitta Autio; Harri Kankaanpää; Katrin Erler