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Dive into the research topics where Sandra Fernández-Fernández is active.

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Featured researches published by Sandra Fernández-Fernández.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2013

Assessment of the health quality of Ria de Aveiro (Portugal): Heavy metals and benthic foraminifera

Virgínia Martins; Fabrizio Frontalini; Keila Modesto Tramonte; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; Paulo Miranda; Cristina Sequeira; Sandra Fernández-Fernández; João Alveirinho Dias; Cintia Yamashita; Raquel Renó; Lazaro Luiz Mattos Laut; Frederico Sobrinho da Silva; Maria Antonieta da Conceição Rodrigues; Cristina Bernardes; Renata H. Nagai; Silvia Helena de Mello e Sousa; Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Belén Rubio; Ana M. Bernabeu; Daniel Rey; Fernando Rocha

This work analyses the distribution of heavy metals in the sediments of Ria de Aveiro (Portugal) assessed by total digestion and sequential chemical extraction of the sediments. The influence of environmental parameters on the living benthic foraminiferal assemblages was studied. The most polluted parts in the Ria de Aveiro are areas where the residence time is high and cohesive sediments are deposited. Organic matter, which is an excellent scavenger for a number of metals, is in general more abundant in the finer deposits of this lagoon, which act as sinks of anthropogenic pollutants. This condition is observed in Aveiro canals and Murtosa channel where sediments with the highest concentrations of Zn, Pb, Cu, and Cr are found. The sediments of Murtosa channel are also enriched in As, Co and Hg. In Aveiro canals the enrichment of heavy metals is mostly related to the past industrial production at their margins (ceramic and metallurgy), whereas in Murtosa channel with effluent discharges of the Chemical Complex of Estarreja. Foraminiferal density and diversity reach higher values near the lagoon mouth under higher marine influence and decline in general under very low-oxygen conditions. Some species seems to be indifferent to the increasing of TOC (e.g. Haynesina germanica and Ammonia tepida) and some have an opportunistic behaviour in areas with very depressed levels of oxygen (e.g. A. tepida and Quinqueloculina seminulum) whereas other species can better tolerate sulphide/reducing conditions (e.g. H. germanica, Bolivina ordinaria, Buliminella elegantissima, Bulimina elongata/gibba and Nonionella stella) a widespread condition in this lagoon. Foraminiferal density and some species are negatively correlated with concentrations of heavy metals. A most sensitive group of species to higher concentrations of heavy metals is identified (such as B. ordinaria, B. pseudoplicata and B. elongata/gibba) and another one of more tolerant species (such as H. germanica A. tepida and Q. seminulum). Foraminifera are more tolerate higher available concentrations (AC) of Zn in any phase than higher AC of Cu adsorbed do clay minerals (F1) and associated with Fe and Mn oxides (F2) and of Pb in F2; the phase F2, probably the most mobile phase, and even phase F1 seems to be more toxic than the increasing of metals in organic matter (F3).


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2013

Recurrent arrival of oil to Galician coast: the final step of the Prestige deep oil spill.

Ana M. Bernabeu; Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Frédéric Bouchette; Daniel Rey; A. Arcos; Josep M. Bayona; J. Albaigés

Yearly monitoring in one of the most affected coastal zones by the Prestige oil spill, namely Nemiña and O Rostro beaches (NW Spain), has been carried out since 2004. Topographic data of beaches revealed seasonal altimetric changes up to 4m that would prevent the on shore persistence of oil. However, surficial and subsurficial oil was detected in the intertidal area of both beaches in all campaigns. The hydrocarbon analysis confirmed that this oil corresponded to the Prestige oil, even nine years after the accident. Tar balls were highly biodegraded suggesting that the oil was accumulated on the subtidal sediments for a long time and transported to the coast by the action of waves. The present work provides new evidence of the long term persistence of deep oil spills from wrecks in marine areas where the hydrodynamic conditions play a twofold key role, in determining the exposed coastal area to recurrent contamination and in burying and resurfacing the oil in the intertidal zone.


Archive | 2016

The ITRAX core scanner, a useful tool to distinguish anthropic vs. climatic influences in lagoon of Aveiro (N Portugal)

Virgínia Martins; João Alveirinho Dias; Cristina Bernardes; Belén Rubio; Ana M. Bernabeu; Daniel Rey; António M. Monge Soares; Frederico Sobrinho; Lazaro Luiz Mattos Laut; Fabrizio Frontalini; Denise Terroso; Paulo Miranda; Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Maria Antonieta da Conceição Rodrigues; Rubens Cesar Lopes Figueira; Silvia Helena de Mello e Sousa; Paula Garcia Carvalho do Amaral; Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Fernando Rocha

ABSTRACT Martins, V. A., Dias, J. A., Bernardes, C., Rubio, B., Bernabeu, A., , Rey, D., Soares, A.M., Sobrinho, F., Laut, L.M., Frontalini, F., Terroso, D., Miranda, P., Fernández-Fernández. S., Rodrigues, M.A., Figueira, R., Sousa, S.M., Amaral, P. Mahiques, M. and Rocha, F., 2013. The ITRAX core scanner, an useful tool to distinguish anthropic vs climatic influences in lagoon of Aveiro (N Portugal). The main goal of this work is to distinguish anthropic and climatic influences in sediments from the lagoon of Aveiro (Portugal). This study is based on a core (240-cm long) collected in Murtosa Channel. Optical and X-radiographic images and high-resolution elemental profiles were acquired with ITRAX micro-X-ray fluorescence (XRF) core scanner. Samples collected at each ≈3 cm along the core were analysed for grain size and total organic carbon. Furthermore, the fine fraction of selected layers was subjected to geochemical analysis by ICP-MS, after total acid digestion of the sediments, and mineralogical analysis, by XRD techniques. A radiocarbon age was determined by AMS, using molluscs shells collected at a depth of 90 cm. Sediments along the core are composed by fine and medium sand, with several mud layers. Sediments composing the first 100-cm may have been deposited after 1950, as it is indicated by the radiocarbon data, the increasing trend of Zn/Al, Pb/Al and Cu/Al and total concentrations of Zn, Pb, Cu, V, Cr, As and Ni in this interval that therefore might be linked with industrial activities of Chemical Complex of Estarreja. The progressive increase of Si/Al, Cl/Al, Rb/Al, K/Al and Br/Al and reduced Al concentrations, from the base to the top of this core, are interpreted as being related to higher marine influence and greater differences in tidal currents with longer exposition to air of the sediments with the consequent formation of brines favouring minerals precipitation in the area (e.g. anhydrite). These results seem to be a consequence of several works developed over time like: i) dredging to improve the navigation access to the harbour, located in the external sector of the lagoon; ii) the control of the course of some rivers influencing the supply of sediments. The tendency of sea level rise may have also emphasized the gradual increase of marine influence in this area. Fine-grained sections, related to an increase in Al, phyllosilicates, organic matter, pyrite and siderite contents would be attributed to phases of greater supply of fine-sediments during heavy rainfall events by the nearby Antuã river and other streams during negative phases of North Atlantic Oscillation. Higher deposition of organic matter enhanced diagenetic changes with pyrite and siderite formation. In the bottom of the core another record of pollution was unveiled to mining activities at the beginning of 20th century.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2016

A theoretical model to estimate the oil burial depth on sandy beaches: A new oil spill management tool

Ana M. Bernabeu; Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Daniel Rey

In oiled sandy beaches, unrecovered fuel can be buried up to several metres. This study proposes a theoretical approach to oil burial estimation along the intertidal area. First, our results revealed the existence of two main patterns in seasonal beach profile behaviour. Type A is characterized by intertidal slopes of time-constant steepness which advance/recede parallel to themselves in response to changing wave conditions. Type B is characterized by slopes of time-varying steepness which intersect at a given point in the intertidal area. This finding has a direct influence on the definition of oil depth. Type A pattern exhibits oil burial along the entire intertidal area following decreasing wave energy, while the type B pattern combines burial in high intertidal and exhumation in mid and/or low intertidal zones, depending on the position of the intersection point. These outcomes should be incorporated as key tools in future oil spill management programs.


Journal of Waterway Port Coastal and Ocean Engineering-asce | 2016

Longshore Transport Estimation on Ofir Beach in Northwest Portugal: Sand-Tracer Experiment

Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Paulo Baptista; Virgínia Martins; Paulo A. Silva; Tiago Abreu; Joaquim Pais-Barbosa; Cristina Bernardes; Paulo Miranda; Mariana Vieira Lima Matias da Rocha; Fábio Alves dos Santos; Ana M. Bernabeu; Daniel Rey

AbstractThis work aims to shed some light on longshore sediment transport (LST) in the highly energetic northwest coast of Portugal. Data achieved through a sand-tracer experiment are compared with data obtained from the original and the new re-evaluated longshore sediment transport formulas (USACE Waterways Experiment Station’s Coastal Engineering and Research Center, Kamphuis, and Bayram bulk formulas) to assess their performance. The field experiment with dyed sand was held at Ofir Beach during one tidal cycle under medium wave-energy conditions. Local hydrodynamic conditions and beach topography were recorded. The tracer was driven southward in response to the local swell and wind- and wave-induced currents (Hsb=0.75m, Tp=11.5s, θb=8−12°). The LST was estimated by using a linear sediment transport flux approach. The obtained value (2.3×10−3m3⋅s−1) approached the estimation provided by the original Bayram formula (2.5×10−3m3⋅s−1). The other formulas overestimated the transport, but the estimations resu...


Anuário do Instituto de Geociências - UFRJ | 2016

Associações de Foraminíferos em Resposta a Variações Ambientais da Laguna de Aveiro – Portugal

Maria Virgínia Alves Martins; Lazaro Luiz Mattos Laut; Frederico Sobrinho da Silva; Paulo Miranda; João Graciano Mendonça-Filho; Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Sílvia S. Sousa; Maria Antonieta da Conceição Rodrigues; André Rosch Rodrigues; Cintia Yamashita; Edilson O. Faria; Raquel de Oliveira; Renata H. Nagai

This study is based on the characterization of the sedimentary environment in selected sites, located in Aveiro canals and salt-pans, in the eastern-central and northern part of Aveiro Lagoon. Results of physicochemical parameters measured in water and sediment, as well as grain size, geochemical and microfaunal (benthic foraminifera) data are analyzed. The determinants factors of spatial and seasonal variability of living and dead foraminiferal assemblages were analyzed in two sampling periods, late summer and late winter, in order to study the response of these organisms to the impact caused by pollution and sazonal variation of physicochemical parameters. Biotic and abiotic results are analyzed to discriminate sites with different degree of environmental stress. The conditions of salinity, temperature, pH and Eh in the studied sites vary spatially and seasonally. The sediment in these locations is generally poorly oxygenated, suboxic or even anoxic a few millimeters below the surface. Some of the sites are affected by chemicals derived from industrial effluents and urban contaminants. The most polluted areas by heavy metals such as As, Cr, Cu and Zn are Porto de Salreu, Largo do Laranjo and some locals in the city of Aveiro. Foraminiferal assemblages in the studied sites integrate common lagoonal and estuarine euryhaline and eurythermic species, most of which tolerant to the oxygen reduction. The size of the living foraminiferal communities is reduced and their structure affected by increasing concentrations of heavy metals such as As, Cr, Cu and Zn, as well as by the high variability of environmental parameters such as low Eh, related to depressed levels of oxygen in the sediment, leading to the death of many species. The results also indicate a greater tolerance of some opportunistic species to the Pb enrichment, since the environment offer them abundance and quality of food.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2014

The effect of sand composition on the degradation of buried oil

Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Ana M. Bernabeu; Daniel Rey; Ana P. Mucha; C. Marisa R. Almeida; Frédéric Bouchette

The potential effects of the mineralogical composition of sediment on the degradation of oil buried on sandy beaches were investigated. Toward that purpose, a laboratory experiment was carried out with sandy sediment collected along NW Iberian Peninsula beaches, tar-balls from the Prestige oil spill (NW Spain) and seawater. The results indicate that the mineralogical composition is important for the physical appearance of the oil (tar-balls or oil coatings). This finding prompted a reassessment of the current sequence of degradation for buried oil based on compositional factors. Moreover, the halo development of the oil coatings might be enhanced by the carbonate concentration of the sand. These findings open new prospects for future monitoring and management programs for oiled sandy beaches.


International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings | 2011

Persistence of 7- years- old Prestige Oil Spill on Sandy Beaches (NW Spain)

Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Ana Ma Bernabeu; Frédéric Bouchette; Daniel Rey; Federico Vilas

ABSTRACT The persistence of oil after an oil spill has been widely researched on gravel beaches where the oil percolates in the superficial coarser sediment and is stored in a deeper layer of fine ...


Journal of Coastal Research | 2010

Beach morphodynamic influence on long-term oil pollution: The Prestige oil spill

Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Ana M. Bernabeu; Frédéric Bouchette; Daniel Rey; Federico Vilas


Journal of Coastal Research | 2018

Wave Climate Definition on Modeling Morphological Changes in Figueira da Foz Coastal System (W Portugal)

Caroline Ferreira; Paulo A. Silva; Sandra Fernández-Fernández; Paulo Baptista; Tiago Abreu; Soraia Romão; Ángela Fontán-Bouzas; Xavier Bertin; Carla Garrido

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Tiago Abreu

Polytechnic Institute of Viseu

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