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. 2009 Aug 15;14(6):307–318. doi: 10.1007/s12199-009-0101-1

Table 1.

Current environmental specimen banks in 2008

Description Kyoto University Human Specimen bank es-Bank Time capsule NIES
Home page http://hes.pbh.med.kyoto-u.ac.jp/kuhsb/ http://www.ehime-u.ac.jp/~cmes/esbank/esbank.htm http://www.nies.go.jp/timecaps1/index.htm
Foundation Founded in 2004 by Department of Health and Environmental Sciences, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine Founded in 2002 by Center for Marine Environmental Studies Founded in 2004 by National Institute for Environmental Studies
Storage −30°C −25°C −20 to −150°C
Sample description Human blood and serum sampled with 1-day meals. Those samples have been collected from 1970s to 2008 in Japan, China, Korea, Philippine, Thailand, and Vietnam. While there are some blood samples and meal samples, which have been collected independently, most of the samples have been collected in a food duplicate design Wildlife, sea water, soils from various locations of the world Fishes, shellfishes and marine sediments
Breast milk samples have been collected from 1980s to the present in Japan, China, Korea, and Vietnam Airborne particulate matters
Urine samples have been collected in the 2000s in Japan Human breast milk collected in Tokyo from 2001 to 2007, 30 samples per year
Sample quantity or sampling Blood or serum: 28,000 This bank has collected the tissues and organs of 1,000 species with 100,000 wild life and environmental samples Bivalves have been collected all over Japan from 2003. They have been collected at eight sites annually and other more than 100 sites Fish and sediments in Tokyo bay collected at 20 sites annually from 2003
Meals: 3,500 days
Breast milk: 3,000 Details are unknown for human breast milk samples
Urine: 14,000 Airborne particulate matters from six sites
Human breast milk samples, totally about 600
Meta data Serum and food samples are accompanied by personal information, including age, sex, occupation, food habit, and meal menu. Breast milk samples were collected with questionnaires between 0 to 12 post-partum weeks No description on the home page
Design Human exposure monitoring: Most of blood and meals samples were collected in a food duplicate design (see text) Global marine monitoring No specific designs
Functional category of the bank Retrospective human exposure monitoring for Asian countries Retrospective ecological monitoring Long-term storage for future studies
NBSB German ESB for human tissues Swedish ESB
Home page http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/gallery/specimen.htm http://www.umweltprobenbank.de http://www.nrm.se/
Foundation Founded in 1979 by National Institute of Standards and Technology and U.S. EPA Founded in 1981 by University Hospital Munster and Federal Environmental Agency Founded in 1980 by the Swedish Museum of National History
Storage −80 to  −150°C −150°C −30 to −80°C
Sample description Human liver, Human blood serum, Human blood spots, human food specimens 24-h urine, whole blood and blood plasma have been collected from the beginning. Until 2005, saliva, scalp and pubic hair had been collected. Recently, collection of placenta, umbilical cord blood and amniotic fluid have initiated Mammals, Birds, Eggs, Wings of birds, Fish, Mosses soil, sludge, breast milk and food products
Mussels and oysters, fish livers and muscle, fish (whole) In total approximately 8,000–9,000 specimens have been collected annually and 3,500 specimens have been processed for chemical and biological analysis
Marine sediments, marine mammal tissues, seabird eggs, peregrine falcon eggs and feathers
Sample quantity or sampling While relatively small numbers of human samples (8–722), a large numbers of ecological animal samples 125 volunteers aged between 20 and 29 per location and year for 4 sites joined the donation of samples Mammals: 20,000
Birds:21,000, eggs: 6,500
Wings of birds: 30,000
Fish: 115,000, mosses: 10,000, sludge: 8,000
Breast milk: 800, food products: 12,000
Meta data No description on the home page Sex, age, place of birth, medical data, and personal behavior by a standard self-reported questionnaire Registered in database together with results made by chemical and biological analysis
Design Domestic ecosystem monitoring with consideration of trophic levels and wild animal health status Human body burden monitoring Nordic ecosystem monitoring of ecological system with consideration of food chain and biological diversities
Functional category of the bank Whole ecological monitoring in the sea around USA Real and retrospective monitoring and long-term storage Real-time and retrospective monitoring and long-term storage

ESB, Environmental Specimen Bank; es-Bank, Ehime University; NIES, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan; NBSB, National Biomonitoring Specimen Bank, USA