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Featured researches published by M. Shaw.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2010

Monitoring pesticides in the Great Barrier Reef

M. Shaw; Miles Furnas; Katharina Fabricius; David Haynes; Steve Carter; Geoff Eaglesham; Jochen F. Mueller

Pesticide runoff from agriculture poses a threat to water quality in the world heritage listed Great Barrier Reef (GBR) and sensitive monitoring tools are needed to detect these pollutants. This study investigated the utility of passive samplers in this role through deployment during a wet and dry season at river mouths, two near-shore regions and an offshore region. The nearshore marine environment was shown to be contaminated with pesticides in both the dry and wet seasons (average water concentrations of 1.3-3.8 ng L(-1) and 2.2-6.4 ng L(-1), respectively), while no pesticides were detected further offshore. Continuous monitoring of two rivers over 13 months showed waters flowing to the GBR were contaminated with herbicides (diuron, atrazine, hexazinone) year round, with highest average concentrations present during summer (350 ng L(-1)). The use of passive samplers has enabled identification of insecticides in GBR waters which have not been reported in the literature previously.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2012

Long term monitoring of photosystem II herbicides – Correlation with remotely sensed freshwater extent to monitor changes in the quality of water entering the Great Barrier Reef, Australia

Karen Kennedy; Thomas Schroeder; M. Shaw; David Haynes; Stephen Lewis; Christie Bentley; Chris Paxman; Steve Carter; Vittorio E. Brando; Michael Bartkow; Laurence Hearn; Jochen F. Mueller

Photosystem II (PSII) herbicides are used in large quantities on agricultural lands adjoining the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Routine monitoring at 14 sites in inshore waters of the GBR using passive sampling techniques detected diuron (32-94% of sampling periods) at maximum concentrations of 1.7-430ng L(-1) in the relatively pristine Cape York Region to the Mackay Whitsunday Region, respectively. A PSII herbicide equivalent (PSII-HEq) index developed as an indicator for reporting was dominated by diuron (average contribution 89%) and typically increased during the wet season. The maximum PSII-HEq indicates the potential for photosynthetic inhibition of diatoms, seagrass and coral-symbionts. PSII herbicides were significantly positively correlated with remotely sensed coloured dissolved organic matter, a proxy for freshwater extent. Combining these methods provides for the first time the potential to cost-effectively monitor improvements in water quality entering the GBR with respect to exposure to PSII herbicides.


Chemosphere | 2009

Uptake and release of polar compounds in SDB-RPS Empore™ disks; implications for their use as passive samplers

M. Shaw; Geoff Eaglesham; Jochen F. Mueller

Demand for sensitive monitoring tools to detect trace levels of pollutants in aquatic environments has led to investigation of sorbents to complement the suite of passive sampling phases currently in use. Styrenedivinylbenzene-reverse phase sulfonated (SDB-RPS) sorbents have a high affinity for polar organic compounds such as herbicides. However, the applicability of the performance reference compound (PRC) concept as an in situ calibration method for passive samplers that use this or similar sampling phases has yet to be validated. In this study, laboratory based calibration experiments were conducted to compare the uptake kinetics of several key pesticides with the release of three pre-loaded PRCs in Chemcatchers using SDB-RPS Empore disks deployed with a membrane and without (naked). For compounds with log K(OW) values ranging from 1.8 to 4.0, uptake into samplers with a membrane and without was linear over 30d and 10d, respectively. While uptake was linear and reproducible, PRC loss was not linear, meaning that the dissipation rates of these PRCs cannot be used to estimate field exposure conditions on uptake rates. An alternative in situ calibration technique using PRC loaded polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) disks deployed alongside the Empore disk samplers as a surrogate calibration phase has been tested in the current study and shows promise for future applications.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2012

Assessing the additive risks of PSII herbicide exposure to the Great Barrier Reef

Stephen Lewis; Britta Schaffelke; M. Shaw; Zoe Bainbridge; Ken Rohde; Karen Kennedy; Aaron M. Davis; Bronwyn L. Masters; Michelle Devlin; Jochen F. Mueller; Jon Brodie

Herbicide residues have been measured in the Great Barrier Reef lagoon at concentrations which have the potential to harm marine plant communities. Monitoring on the Great Barrier Reef lagoon following wet season discharge show that 80% of the time when herbicides are detected, more than one are present. These herbicides have been shown to act in an additive manner with regards to photosystem-II inhibition. In this study, the area of the Great Barrier Reef considered to be at risk from herbicides is compared when exposures are considered for each herbicide individually and also for herbicide mixtures. Two normalisation indices for herbicide mixtures were calculated based on current guidelines and PSII inhibition thresholds. The results show that the area of risk for most regions is greatly increased under the proposed additive PSII inhibition threshold and that the resilience of this important ecosystem could be reduced by exposure to these herbicides.


Aquatic Toxicology | 2009

Predicting water toxicity: Pairing passive sampling with bioassays on the Great Barrier Reef

M. Shaw; Andrew P. Negri; Katharina E. Fabricius; Jochen F. Mueller

Many coral reefs worldwide occur adjacent to urban or agricultural land which places these ecosystems at threat of exposure to complex mixtures of pollutants. In this study, the pairing of passive sampler extracts with bioassays is proposed as a tool for predicting effects of organic pollutant mixtures on key biota within coral reef ecosystems. Passive samplers, SDB-RPS Empore disks, which sequester a mixture of the contaminants present in the environment, were deployed at three sites in the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Extracts from these samplers were analysed for herbicides and applied to bioassays targeting integral life stages or functions of coral reef biota. Biota included scleractinian coral larvae, sea urchin larvae, a marine diatom and marine bacteria. Photosynthesis in the marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum was inhibited at the sampled environmental concentration while an environmental concentration factor of 15 times inhibited luminescence in the marine bacterium Vibrio fischeri. Concentrations of 50 times sampled environmental levels of organic pollutants inhibited >90% of Acropora millepora settlement and 100-fold environmental enrichment inhibited 100% Heliocidaris tuberculata larval development. These results demonstrate the utility of pairing passive sampling with bioassays and reveal that mixtures of organic pollutants in the GBR have the potential to cause detrimental effects to coral reef biota.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2016

Pesticide Behavior, Fate, and Effects in the Tropics: An Overview of the Current State of Knowledge

Stephen Lewis; D. Mark Silburn; Rai S. Kookana; M. Shaw

This special issue presents a collection of papers covering the environmental fate, effects, and risk of pesticides in tropical environments, which is expected to facilitate improved management of pesticides. Environmental monitoring programs of surface and ground waters in the tropics, including areas of high ecological value, have detected several relatively polar pesticides at concentrations that are of ecological concern. Novel monitoring techniques have the capacity to reveal the spatial and temporal extent of such risks. To best manage these pesticides, their sorption, dissipation rates, leaching, and runoff potential need to be better understood. On these aspects, important insights have been provided by several studies within this issue. Improved understanding of the environmental fate, effects, and risks through studies presented in this special issue is crucial for minimizing the nontarget impacts of pesticides on biodiversity-rich tropical regions.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2005

Preliminary evaluation of the occurrence of herbicides and PAHs in the Wet Tropics region of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia, using passive samplers

M. Shaw; Jochen F. Müller


Environmental Science & Technology | 2009

Time integrative passive sampling: how well do chemcatchers integrate fluctuating pollutant concentrations?

M. Shaw; Jochen F. Mueller


Chemosphere | 2004

Monitoring PAHs in the Brisbane River and Moreton Bay, Australia, using semipermeable membrane devices and EROD activity in yellowfin bream, Acanthopagrus australis.

M. Shaw; Ian R. Tibbetts; Jochen F. Müller


Environmental Pollution | 2011

The performance of passive flow monitors and phosphate accumulating passive samplers when exposed to pulses in external water flow rate and/or external phosphate concentrations.

Dominique S. O'Brien; Darryl William Hawker; M. Shaw; Jochen F. Mueller

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R. Muller

University of Queensland

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Robert Symons

National Measurement Institute

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David Haynes

Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority

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Chris Paxman

University of Queensland

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Karen Kennedy

University of Queensland

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Caroline Gaus

University of Queensland

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Eva Holt

University of Queensland

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