RT Journal Article T1 Fine-tuning the use of moss transplants to map pollution by Potentially Toxic Elements (PTEs) in urban areas A1 Vázquez Arias, Antón A1 Giráldez Suárez, Pablo A1 Martínez Abaigar, Javier A1 Núñez Olivera, Encarnación A1 Aboal Viñas, Jesús A1 Fernández Escribano, José Ángel K1 Moss K1 Atmospheric deposition K1 Biomonitoring K1 Enrichment rate K1 Kriging AB Mosspheres are a kind of moss transplants which offer a novel approach for detecting atmospheric pollution using devitalized mosses, as they reflect the atmospheric deposition of certain elements and polycyclic hydrocarbons. However, due to the unique features of the mosspheres such as the low elemental concentrations in the cultured material, the data treatment needs to be different from that of conventional biomonitoring studies. In this article, our objectives are to identify the best parameter for expressing the levels of chemical elements accumulated by mosspheres, and to apply a recently developed method to assess the probability of pollution of each sample and of the study area. To do this, we used data from a study in which 81 mosspheres were exposed in a medium-sized city in southwestern Europe.Comparing different pollution indices, we selected the enrichment rate (ER) as the most useful, as it is resilient to fluctuations in the initial concentrations and takes into account the time factor, allowing for greater comparability among studies. Then, we determined that the statistical distribution of the ERs of most elements fitted a normal distribution, showing that most samples did not differ significantly from the background concentrations for these elements. On the other hand, for Ni, Pb and Zn there was a subpopulation of samples above background values. In these cases, we determined the probability of pollution of each sample. Finally, we used indicator kriging to calculate the probability of pollution across the study area, identifying the polluted areas, which for some elements match the distribution of the main industries and highways, indicating that this is a suitable protocol to map elemental pollution in urban areas. PB Elsevier SN 0048-9697 YR 2024 FD 2024 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10347/33828 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10347/33828 LA eng NO Science of The Total Environment Volume 923, 1 May 2024, 171601 NO This study was financially supported by Caixabank. Antón Vázquez-Arias, Pablo Giráldez, Jesús R. Aboal and J. Ángel Fernández acknowledge financial support provided by the Xunta de Galicia - Consellería de Educación e Ordenación Universitaria (Consolidation of Competitive Research Groups; GI-1252, ED431C 2020/19). Antón Vázquez-Arias is grateful to the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades for a grant awarded within the Programa de Formacion de Profesorado Universitario (grant number FPU19/01989). DS Minerva RD 23 abr 2026