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Dive into the research topics where Tsvetan Kotsev is active.

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Featured researches published by Tsvetan Kotsev.


Environmental Pollution | 2010

Quantifying sediment-associated metal dispersal using Pb isotopes: application of binary and multivariate mixing models at the catchment-scale.

Graham Bird; Paul Brewer; Mark G. Macklin; Mariyana Nikolova; Tsvetan Kotsev; Mihail Mollov; Catherine Helena Swain

In this study Pb isotope signatures were used to identify the provenance of contaminant metals and establish patterns of downstream sediment dispersal within the River Maritsa catchment, which is impacted by the mining of polymetallic ores. A two-fold modelling approach was undertaken to quantify sediment-associated metal delivery to the Maritsa catchment; employing binary mixing models in tributary systems and a composite fingerprinting and mixing model approach in the wider Maritsa catchment. Composite fingerprints were determined using Pb isotopic and multi-element geochemical data to characterize sediments delivered from tributary catchments. Application of a mixing model allowed a quantification of the percentage contribution of tributary catchments to the sediment load of the River Maritsa. Sediment delivery from tributaries directly affected by mining activity contributes 42-63% to the sediment load of the River Maritsa, with best-fit regression relationships indicating that sediments originating from mining-affected tributaries are being dispersed over 200 km downstream.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

Bioaccessibility of Arsenic in Mining-Impacted Circumneutral River Floodplain Soils

Christian Mikutta; Petar N. Mandaliev; Nina Mahler; Tsvetan Kotsev; Ruben Kretzschmar

Floodplain soils are frequently contaminated with metal(loid)s due to present or historic mining, but data on the bioaccessibility (BA) of contaminants in these periodically flooded soils are scarce. Therefore, we studied the speciation of As and Fe in eight As-contaminated circumneutral floodplain soils (≤ 21600 mg As/kg) and their size fractions using X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and examined the BA of As in the solids by in-vitro gastrointestinal (IVG) extractions. Arsenopyrite and As(V)-adsorbed ferrihydrite were identified by XAS as the predominant As species. The latter was the major source for bioaccessible As, which accounted for 5-35% of the total As. The amount of bioaccessible As increased with decreasing particle size and was controlled by the slow dissolution kinetics of ferrihydrite in the gastric environment (pH 1.8). The relative BA of As (% of total) decreased with decreasing particle size only in a highly As-contaminated soil--which supported by Fe XAS--suggests the formation of As-rich hydrous ferric oxides in the gastric extracts. Multiple linear regression analyses identified Al, total As, C(org), and P as main predictors for the absolute BA of As (adjusted R(2) ≤ 0.977). Health risk assessments for residential adults showed that (i) nearly half of the bulk soils may cause adverse health effects and (ii) particles <5 μm pose the highest absolute health threat upon incidental soil ingestion. Owing to their low abundance, however, health risks were primarily associated with particles in the 5-50 and 100-200 μm size ranges. These particles are easily mobilized from riverbanks during flooding events and dispersed within the floodplain or transported downstream.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Soil-to-plant transfer of arsenic and phosphorus along a contamination gradient in the mining-impacted Ogosta River floodplain.

Michael Simmler; Elke Suess; Iso Christl; Tsvetan Kotsev; Ruben Kretzschmar

Riverine floodplains downstream of active or former metal sulfide mines are in many cases contaminated with trace metals and metalloids, including arsenic (As). Since decontamination of such floodplains on a large scale is unfeasible, management of contaminated land must focus on providing land use guidelines or even restrictions. This should be based on knowledge about how contaminants enter the food chain. For As, uptake by plants may be an important pathway, but the As soil-to-plant transfer under field conditions is poorly understood. Here, we investigated the soil-to-shoot transfer of As and phosphorus (P) in wild populations of herbaceous species growing along an As contamination gradient across an extensive pasture in the mining-impacted Ogosta River floodplain. The As concentrations in the shoots of Trifolium repens and Holcus lanatus reflected the soil contamination gradient. However, the soil-to-shoot transfer factors (TF) were fairly low, with values mostly below 0.07 (TF=Asshoot/Assoil). We found no evidence for interference of As with P uptake by plants, despite extremely high molar As:P ratios (up to 2.6) in Olsen soil extracts of the most contaminated topsoils (0-20cm). Considering the restricted soil-to-shoot transfer, we estimated that for grazing livestock As intake via soil ingestion is likely more important than intake via pasture herbage.


Geoderma | 2013

Industrial contamination of alluvial soils near Fe–Pb mining site revealed by magnetic and geochemical studies

Diana Jordanova; Srinivasa Rao Goddu; Tsvetan Kotsev; Neli Jordanova


Water Air and Soil Pollution | 2010

Dispersal of Contaminant Metals in the Mining-Affected Danube and Maritsa Drainage Basins, Bulgaria, Eastern Europe

Graham Bird; Paul Brewer; Mark G. Macklin; Mariyana Nikolova; Tsvetan Kotsev; Mihail Mollov; Catherine Helena Swain


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

Arsenic Species Formed from Arsenopyrite Weathering along a Contamination Gradient in Circumneutral River Floodplain Soils

Petar N. Mandaliev; Christian Mikutta; Kurt Barmettler; Tsvetan Kotsev; Ruben Kretzschmar


Applied Geochemistry | 2010

Pb isotope evidence for contaminant-metal dispersal in an international river system: The lower Danube catchment, Eastern Europe

Graham Bird; Paul Brewer; Mark G. Macklin; Mariyana Nikolova; Tsvetan Kotsev; Mihail Mollov; Catherine Helena Swain


Archive | 2010

Source to sink river pollution assessment in northern Bulgaria : Preliminary results on contaminant delivery in the lower Danube basin

Paul Brewer; Mariyana Nikolova; Graham Bird; Tsvetan Kotsev; Mark G. Macklin; Mihail Mollov; Catherine Helena Swain


Archive | 2010

Sediment origin and dispersal dynamics in the lower Danube Basin

Graham Bird; Paul Brewer; Mark G. Macklin; Mariana Nikolova; Tsvetan Kotsev; Mihaela Sima; Mihail Mollov


Environmental Pollution | 2017

Reductive solubilization of arsenic in a mining-impacted river floodplain: Influence of soil properties and temperature

Michael Simmler; Jérôme Bommer; Sarah Frischknecht; Iso Christl; Tsvetan Kotsev; Ruben Kretzschmar

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Paul Brewer

Aberystwyth University

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Mariyana Nikolova

Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

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Christian Mikutta

Leibniz University of Hanover

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Kurt Barmettler

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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