Abstract

Estuaries have long been preferred sites of human settlement due to the benefits regarding proximity to fresh water and the ocean. As such, these environments have been subject to increasing anthropogenic pressures, resulting in issues of pollution and contamination. However, since the second half of the 20th century an environmental concern has reflected in the development of legislation, monitoring programmes and measures to diminish and control those impacts. The study presented herein integrates metals and metalloid concentrations from surface water samples obtained in a long-term monitoring programme (1986–2020) conducted in the Sado Estuary. The results obtained show a decrease and stabilisation of the concentrations of elements (between 81 % for Pb and 11 % for As in the average concentrations, between 83 % for Pb and 11 % for Cd in the median concentrations, and an increase of 1 % in the As median values). Nevertheless, high concentrations were still observed in the stations closest to the industrial area and the main freshwater to confluence with the estuary. Despite the efforts in improving the environmental quality of the Sado Estuary, possible effects in native species such as cuttlefishes and oysters are still a possibility, particularly in the stations where higher concentrations were registered, as well as close to nurseries as a result of trace metal transport through currents and tides.

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