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Featured researches published by Joelle Prange.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2000

Physiological Responses of Five Seagrass Species to Trace Metals

Joelle Prange; William C. Dennison

Trace metal run-off associated with urban and industrial development poses potential threats to seagrasses in adjacent coastal ecosystems, Seagrass from the largest urban (Moreton Bay) and industrial (Port Curtis) coastal regions in Queensland, Australia were assessed for metal concentrations of iron (Fe), aluminium (Al), zinc (Zn), chromium (Cr) and copper (Cu), Trace metal concentrations in seagrass (Zostera capricorni) leaf and root-rhizome tissue had the following overall trend: [Fe] > [Al] > [Zn] > [Cr] > [Cu]. Rainfall events and anthropogenic disturbances appeared to influence metal concentrations in seagrasses with the exception of Al, which does not appear to bioaccumulate, In laboratory experiments, five seagrass species (Halophila ovalis, H. spinulosa, Halodule uninervis, Z. capricorni, Cymodocea serrulata) were incubated with iron (1 mg Fe l(-1)) and copper (1 mg Cu l(-1)) and responses assessed by changes in PSII photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm), free amino acid content and leaf/root-rhizome metal accumulation. Iron addition experiments only affected Halophila spp, while copper additions affected other seagrass species as well, Trace metal contamination of seagrasses could have ramifications for associated trophic assemblages through metal transfer and seagrass loss, The use of photosystem II photochemical efficiency as well as amino acid concentrations and composition proved to be useful sublethal indicators of trace metal toxicity in seagrasses


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2001

Recent Dioxin Contamination From Agent Orange in Residents of a Southern Vietnam City

Arnold Schecter; Le Cao Dai; Olaf Päpke; Joelle Prange; John D. Constable; Muneaki Matsuda; Vu Duc Thao; Amanda Piskac

Marked elevation of dioxin associated with the herbicide Agent Orange was recently found in 19 of 20 blood samples from persons living in Bien Hoa, a large city in southern Vietnam. This city is located near an air base that was used for Agent Orange spray missions between 1962 and 1970. A spill of Agent Orange occurred at this air base more than 30 years before blood samples were collected in 1999. Samples were collected, frozen, and sent to a World Health Organization–certified dioxin laboratory for congener-specific analysis as part of a Vietnam Red Cross project. Previous analyses of more than 2200 pooled blood samples collected in the 1990s identified Bien Hoa as one of several southern Vietnam areas with persons having elevated blood dioxin levels from exposure to Agent Orange. In sharp contrast to this study, our previous research showed decreasing tissue dioxin levels over time since 1970. Only the dioxin that contaminated Agent Orange, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), was elevated in the blood of 19 of 20 persons sampled from Bien Hoa. A comparison, pooled sample from 100 residents of Hanoi, where Agent Orange was not used, measured blood TCDD levels of 2 parts per trillion (ppt). TCDD levels of up to 271 ppt, a 135-fold increase, were found in Bien Hoa residents. TCDD contamination was also found in some nearby soil and sediment samples. Persons new to this region and children born after Agent Orange spraying ended also had elevated TCDD levels. This TCDD uptake was recent and occurred decades after spraying ended. We hypothesize that a major route of current and past exposures is from the movement of dioxin from soil into river sediment, then into fish, and from fish consumption into people.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2002

Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and polychlorinated dibenzofurans in sediments from Hong Kong

Jochen F. Müller; Caroline Gaus; Joelle Prange; Olaf Päpke; Ka Fai Poon; Michael Hon-Wah Lam; Paul K.S. Lam

Concentrations of 2,3,7,8-substituted polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs) were determined in 14 sediment samples collected from four sites in the Mai Po Marshes Nature Reserve (within a RAMSAR Site) and from another six sites in Victoria Harbour and along the Hong Kong coastline. Elevated levels of PCDDs, and particularly OCDD, were detectable in all samples collected from the Mai Po Marshes and five of the six sites. In contrast to PCDDs, PCDFs were mainly found in sediment samples collected from industrial areas (Kwun Tong and To Kwa Wan) in Victoria Harbour. PCDD/ F levels and congener profiles in the samples from the Mai Po Marshes Nature Reserve in particular show strong similarities to those reported in studies which have attributed similar elevated PCDD concentrations to nonanthropogenic PCDD sources.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2001

Polychlorinated dibenzodioxins and dibenzofurans in butter from different states in Australia

Jochen F. Müller; Joelle Prange; Caroline Gaus; Michael R. Moore; Olaf Päpke

Nine samples of butter from producers in various states of Australia were analysed for polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs) and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs). Detectable concentrations of 2,3,7,8-chlorine substituted PCDD/Fs were found in all samples. The mean PCDD/F concentration expressed as 2,3,7,8-TCDD equivalents (TEQs) was 0.19 pg TEQ g−1 fat. The highest concentration (0.46 pg TEQ g−1 fat) was observable in a sample from Victoria which is the most densely populated state. Overall the results indicate that PCDD/F concentrations in dairy products from Australia are low in comparison to the levels in dairy products of industrialized countries on the Northern Hemisphere. As expected, this study provides evidence that the environmental and consequently the human body burden of PCDD/ Fs to be relatively low in Australia.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2003

Assessing forest fire as a potential PCDD/F source in Queensland, Australia

Joelle Prange; Caroline Gaus; Roland Weber; Olaf Päpke; Jochen F. Müller


Environmental Science & Technology | 2002

Transformation processes, pathways, and possible sources of distinctive polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin signatures in sink environments.

Caroline Gaus; Gregg J. Brunskill; Des Connell; Joelle Prange; Jochen F. Müller; Olaf Päpke; Roland Weber


20th International Symposium on Halogenated Environmental Organic Pollutants and POPs | 2005

Dioxins and Dioxin-Like PCBs in Marine Mammals from Australia

Caroline Gaus; R. Correll; Jochen F. Mueller; Eva Holt; David Ellis; Joelle Prange; M. Shaw; U. Bauer; Robert Symons; Debbie Burniston


21 Int Sump Hal Env Org Poll & Pers Org Pollutants | 2001

Dioxin-Like Compounds in Butter from Australia

Jochen F. Mueller; Joelle Prange; Caroline Gaus; Michael R. Moore; Olaf Päpke


Organohalogen compounds | 2003

Are forest fires a source of PCDD/Fs in Queensland, Australia?

Joelle Prange; Caroline Gaus; Roland Weber; Olaf Päpke; Jochen F. Mueller


Organohalogen compounds | 2002

PCDD/Fs in a historic butter sample from Australia

Jochen F. Mueller; Joelle Prange; Caroline Gaus; M. Heuermann; S. Hartkopp; Michael R. Moore; Olaf Päpke; Keith Horsley

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Caroline Gaus

University of Queensland

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Roland Weber

University of Tübingen

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Eva Holt

University of Queensland

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M. Shaw

University of Queensland

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Robert Symons

National Measurement Institute

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