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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Newman, Eitan S, Scheinin, Aviad, Wosnick, Natascha, Lemos, Leila Soledade, Bigal, Eyal, Itay, Peleg, Saint'Pierre, Tatiana Dillenburg, Tchernov, Dan, Hauser-Davis, Rachel Ann, Morick, Danny
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Environmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987) 2026
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Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42069114/
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Table of Contents:
  • Sulfur, e-waste contaminants and sharks. Newman, Eitan S Scheinin, Aviad Wosnick, Natascha Lemos, Leila Soledade Bigal, Eyal Itay, Peleg Saint'Pierre, Tatiana Dillenburg Tchernov, Dan Hauser-Davis, Rachel Ann Morick, Danny Animals Sharks Environmental Monitoring Water Pollutants, Chemical Sulfur Electronic Waste Mediterranean Sea Metals, Rare Earth Marine apex predators face increasing contaminant exposure, yet non-lethal assessments remain rare. Herein, essential, toxic, and technology-critical elements, including rare earth elements (REEs), were determined in freeze-dried whole blood of two shark species (Carcharhinus obscurus and Carcharhinus plumbeus) sampled in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. Multi-element concentration profiles and inter-individual variability in whole blood were assessed employing inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Elemental profiles differed between species under the sampled demographic structure. Sulfur and lithium were detected at relatively high concentrations, while PAAS-normalized REE patterns were broadly similar between species, characterized by low normalized values for light and middle REEs and comparatively higher normalized values for the heaviest measured element. This study represents one of the few reports of REEs in shark blood and highlights whole-blood elemental profiling as a minimally invasive approach for contaminant surveillance in threatened marine predators. The findings provide baseline information to support future monitoring and non-lethal ecotoxicological studies in vulnerable coastal ecosystems.