خيارات البحث
النتائج 2811 - 2820 من 6,535
Heavy metal contamination and ecological risk assessment in water and sediments of the Halda river, Bangladesh: A natural fish breeding ground
2020
Islam, Mohammad Amirul | Das, Biplob | Quraishi, Shamshad Begum | Khan, Rahat | Naher, Kamrun | Hossain, Syed Mohammod | Karmaker, Shanjib | Latif, Shaikh Abdul | Hossen, Mohammad Belal
This study reports the mass fractions of Al, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Zn, As, Ni, Cu, Cd, Hg, and Pb in water and sediments of the Halda river, Bangladesh, and studies the distribution, contamination, and potential ecological risks of the metals and metalloid. The average mass fractions of As, Cd, and Pb are relatively higher in sediments compared to those in background values, whereas Al, Fe, Mn, and Pb concentration fractions in water are higher than the international guideline values. The results of the different contamination indices indicate that Halda river sediments are minorly contaminated by As and Pb and moderately to considerably contaminated by Cd. The ecological risk assessments indicate considerable to high ecological risk due to Cd. Multivariate statistical analysis reveals the origin of the contaminants in the river, and indicate that Cr, Zn, Pb, and Cd are from anthropogenic activities while the other metals originate from natural lithogenic actions.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Baseline assessment of coastal water quality, in Vanuatu, South Pacific: Insights gained from in-situ sampling
2020
Devlin, Michelle | Smith, Andy | Graves, Carolyn A. | Petus, Caroline | Tracey, Dieter | Maniel, Michael | Hooper, Eryn | Kotra, Krishna | Samie, Erie | Loubser, David | Lyons, Brett P.
Nearshore deterioration of water quality in Pacific coastal waters is a growing problem, associated with increasing urban and industrial sewage discharges, and agricultural runoff. Published water quality studies in the Pacific region are limited in both number and scope, making it difficult to resolve the extent of the issue or quantify the variability of water quality across Pacific islands and countries. This study collected water quality measurements over three years in the coastal waters around the Island of Efate (Vanuatu) with majority of work carried out in Port Vila, its capital. Port Vila is the key urban centre for Vanuatu where the increasing population and pollution inputs are placing substantial pressure on the coastal environment. Highest concentrations of dissolved nutrients and suspended sediments were measured adjacent or near the urban drains that enter the coastal areas along the capital's seafront, highlighting many of the issues around anthropogenic inputs are linked to the increasing urbanisation in Port Vila Bay. We provide baseline data that explores variability of coastal water quality and these types of datasets for Pacific islands are a first step towards facilitating development of long-term monitoring programmes and informing coastal zone management decision making.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Spatial-temporal genome damaging in the blue crab Cardisoma guanhumi as ecological indicators for monitoring tropical estuaries
2020
Falcão, C.B.R. | Pinheiro, M.A.A. | Torres, R.A. | Adam, M.L.
In this study, to better our understanding of the current state of conservation of Cardisoma guanhumi and its habitats, we evaluated the potential spatio-temporal genomic damage of this species across five estuaries in Brazil. The experiment was performed over two consecutive years, and the sampling was performed in the winter and summer seasons. Two genetic tests — micronucleus test and comet assay — were used to quantify the DNA damage. Unlike in the summers and in the winter of 2013, in the winter of 2012 a significant increase was noted in the frequency of micronucleated cells and genomic damage index. The occurrence of genomic damage coincided with the arrival of the harsh winter of 2012 as the water sourced from the coastal rivers significantly affected the estuarine species under study. Our results confirmed that this species was resilient to the atypical climatic conditions, which facilitated the generation of excessive waste.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) in special management sea areas of Korea: Distribution and bioconcentration in edible fish species
2020
Hung, Mai Duc | Jung, Hyeon Ji | Jeong, Hui Ho | Lam, Nguyen Hoang | Cho, Hyeon Seo
Thirteen PFASs in water (n = 58), sediment (n = 58) and edible fish samples (n = 81) collected from three special management sea areas of Korea including Gwangyang bay, Masan bay and Busan harbor in July 2018 were investigated. The mean PFASs concentration in water (ng/L) were in order Masan (5.09) > Busan (2.82) > Gwangyang (1.74). PFASs levels were found as the low concentration in sediment. The greatest total PFASs concentration in each fish tissue was found as 3.04 (ng/g ww) in a Japanese amberjack fish for muscle in Busan, 66.23 (ng/mL) in Japanese amberjack fish for blood in Masan and 125.03 (ng/g ww) flathead grey mullet in Busan bay. The BCF (L/kg) of PFDoDA was found as the highest in muscle of all species with values from 30,922 (grey mullet in Gwangyang) to 69,131 (grey mullet in Busan). PFDS was the highest BCF's PFASs (110,599 L/kg) in muscle which was found in Japanese amberjack in Busan bay.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Application of microbial network analysis to discriminate environmental heterogeneity in Fildes Peninsula, Antarctica
2020
Liu, Qian | Jiang, Yong
In order to determine the practicability of developing a protocol for bioassessing polar marine environment based on network analysis, microplankton communities and co-occurrence patterns at Ardley Cove and Great Wall Cove (King George Island, Antarctica) were studied in January 2016 through high-through sequencing. The spatial patterns and significant differences between community structures in two coves clearly reflect those in environmental heterogeneity. Moreover, both coves had their discriminated network structure and keystones. Then multivariate analyses to quantify the relationship between environmental variation and planktonic microbes response, give further evidence that nitrate and temperature, alone or in combination with other several parameters, structuring the communities respectively indeed. This study presents the first detailed description on co-occurrence networks between microbes and local environmental parameters in Antarctic coastal water. These findings suggest that co-occurrence networks based on planktonic microbes have the robust potential to assess environmental heterogeneity in polar marine ecosystem.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Heavy metal and antibiotic co-resistance in Vibrio parahaemolyticus isolated from shellfish
2020
Jo, SeongBeen | Shin, ChangHyeon | Shin, Yujin | Kim, Poong Ho | Park, Jin il | Kim, Minju | Pak, Po-mi | So, Jae-Seong
Vibrio parahaemolyticus is a major gastroenteritis-causing pathogen in Korea. Recent studies have reported that heavy metal and antimicrobial resistance in bacteria are related. In this study, we investigated heavy metal and antimicrobial resistance in wild strains of V. parahaemolyticus. First, we isolated and characterized 38 V. parahaemolyticus strains (toxR-positive) from shellfish collected from the West Sea of Korea between May and November 2018. Antibiotic and heavy metal resistance in the 38 strains were tested by disk diffusion assay and broth dilution assay, respectively. Then, we selected seven strains that showed resistance to cobalt (Co²⁺) and copper (Cu²⁺), to examine the relationship between heavy metal resistance and antimicrobial resistance. After heavy metal (Co²⁺ and Cu²⁺) pretreatment, the seven strains exhibited increased resistance to kanamycin, streptomycin, tetracycline, and gentamycin. Likewise, antimicrobial pretreatment resulted in increased heavy metal tolerance.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Community-based adaptation to climate change in villages of Western Province, Solomon Islands
2020
Basel, Britt | Goby, Gillian | Johnson, Johanna
People, local cultures and the environments they live in are complex and dynamic social-ecological systems that have evolved together over time and are continually affected by a myriad of factors, including climate and global changes. Escalating climate and global changes present an imminent threat to Pacific communities, particularly for food security, livelihoods, health and safety, cultural identity and biodiversity conservation. A participatory community-based climate change adaptation planning process was used to engage with communities on Rendova Island in Western Province, Solomon Islands to identify local adaptation priorities. The methodology recognized that local community members are the managers of the resources they use daily, have direct knowledge of the status of key local resources and have direct influence over ongoing resource governance. The study focused on two objectives: (1) identifying community priorities and documenting them in adaptation plans intended for local implementation, and (2) evaluating whether community adaptation priorities addressed key vulnerabilities identified independently using a semi-quantitative vulnerability assessment.The adaptation priorities identified by the communities encompassed: governance, leadership and planning; farming and livestock; sustainable livelihoods; natural resource management; and youth capacity building. The community adaptation priorities were found to address the key climate change vulnerabilities identified in the semi-quantitative assessment and also addressed additional drivers of social vulnerability and adaptive capacity. This finding reiterates the importance of fully inclusive and participatory vulnerability assessments and community-identification of adaptation priorities coupled with scientific climate projections to comprehensively assess the complexity of social-ecological systems. The climate change adaptation priorities have informed ongoing local actions and are intended to be used by communities, government and NGOs to focus local effort, funding and project development. A review of the suitability of the adaptation priorities by similar villages on neighbouring islands would determine the utility of scaling-up and applying these adaptations to other rural communities in the Solomon Islands, and possibly more widely in other Pacific communities.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Exposure to sublethal concentrations of zinc pyrithione inhibits growth and survival of marine polychaete through induction of oxidative stress and DNA damage
2020
Haque, Md Niamul | Nam, Sang-Eun | Eom, Hye-Jin | Kim, Seung-Kyu | Rhee, Jae-Sung
Effects of zinc pyrithione (ZnPT) and inorganic Zn (ZnCl₂) were evaluated on a marine polychaete at sublethal concentrations for 14 days. ZnPT decreased the burrowing activity and AChE activity with higher acute toxicities, implying its cholinergic effect. Both ZnPT and ZnCl₂ increased MDA levels at higher concentrations, suggesting lipid peroxidation and oxidative stress. In the ZnPT-treated polychaete, enzymatic activities of CAT and SOD were elevated with an increase in DNA damage, whereas the levels of GSH, GPx, GR, and GST were decreased. However, in the ZnCl₂-treated polychaete, the level of GSH and enzymatic activities of CAT, SOD, GPx, GR, and GST were significantly elevated to resist cellular damage. During 97 days depuration experiment, significant mortality and growth retardation were observed in the ZnPT-exposed polychaete. Overall, ZnPT was found to be more toxic than ZnCl₂ with the harmful impact on antioxidant defense system and DNA stability in marine polychaete.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Nitrogen loss process in hypoxic seawater based on the culture experiment
2020
Tian, Dongfan | Wang, Yueqi | Xing, Jianwei | Sun, Qiqi | Song, Jinming | Li, Xuegang
The oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) and other hypoxic seawaters are considered as the main areas of oceanic nitrogen loss. The laboratory simulation culture was conducted to study the main reactions, rates and proportions of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) in different dissolved oxygen concentrations seawater, with aim of clarifying the process of nitrogen loss in hypoxic seawater. The results showed that the change of DIN in hypoxic water could be divided into three stages. In the first stage, the main reactions were the dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) and denitrification. In the second stage, anammox and denitrification were main reactions. In the last stage, anammox was the most important nitrogen loss reaction; nitrogen loss eventually reached a relative balance with the input from sediment mineralization. Based on the data obtained from the last stage, the annual nitrogen loss could be estimated to be about 240–260 Tg in the global OMZs.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Spatio-temporal evaluation of macro, meso and microplastics in surface waters, bottom and beach sediments of two embayments in Niterói, RJ, Brazil
2020
Castro, Rebeca Oliveira | Silva, Melanie Lopes da | Marques, Mônica R.C. | Araújo, Fábio Vieira de
This study evaluated in the dry and rainy periods, the anthropogenic influence and the hydrodynamics in the distribution of plastic items in surface waters and bottom and beach sediments of the Jurujuba (Guanabara Bay, low and medium hydrodynamic) and Itaipu (oceanic region, high hydrodynamics) embayments; places of cultivation and extraction of mussels. Microplastics were 83% of the wastes collected, with a higher average concentration (138.41 items.kg⁻¹) in beach sediments. High density polyethylene (HDPE) (38%), polypropylene (21%), and styrene (10%) were the most frequent polymers. There was no difference between the water and bottom sediment samples in the different embayments, in the studied periods, different from that observed in the beach sediment samples, with higher concentrations in the rainy season in Jurujuba. The results suggest that beach sediments are the best compartment to understand the dynamics of the distribution of plastic waste over time.
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