Publications by authors named "L Malleret"

This study aimed to examine the occurrence of microplastics in surface water and sediment samples collected from Hanoi to the Ba Lat estuary along the Red River, the second-largest river in Vietnam (surface area: 156,451 km). 21 stations were sampled during the dry (March 2023) and rainy (September 2023) seasons. The analytical procedure involved: digestion with hydrogen peroxide, flotation with potassium carbonate, and overflow filtration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pollution of French West Indies (FWI) soils by the organochlorine pesticide chlordecone poses environmental and societal concerns due to its long-term persistence. Assessing chlordecone degradation remains challenging due to analytical constraints to identify transformation products. Here, multielement compound-specific isotope analysis (ME-CSIA) was used to identify changes in stable isotope signatures of chlordecone produced during abiotic transformation reactions under reducing and oxidative conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Around a hundred of novel brominated flame retardants are currently being used to replace those regulated in the 2000s. However, data about their production, usage, and toxicity is still scarce, as well as their levels of contamination in the Mediterranean Sea and the subsequent risk. Our goal was to select the relevant novel brominated flame retardants to monitor and to apply it along the northeastern Mediterranean Sea.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the last two decades, awareness grew on the matter of the impact of environment on human health. Contaminants sorbed onto soil and settled dust can be ingested and thus represent a hazard, particularly to young children, who play on the ground and bring their hands and objects to their mouth. Metal(loid)s and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are of concern as they are both carcinogenic to humans and ubiquitous in outdoor environments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The quality of chemical analysis is an important aspect of passive sampling-based environmental assessments. The present study reports on a proficiency testing program for the chemical analysis of hydrophobic organic compounds in silicone and low-density polyethylene (LDPE) passive samplers and hydrophilic compounds in polar organic chemical integrative samplers. The median between-laboratory coefficients of variation (CVs) of hydrophobic compound concentrations in the polymer phase were 33% (silicone) and 38% (LDPE), similar to the CVs obtained in four earlier rounds of this program.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF