Assessment of heavy metals and nonessential content of some edible and soft tissues | تقدير تركيزات المعادن الأساسية والغير أساسية في بعض الأنسجة الرخوية الصالحة للأكل
2007
Ahdy, H.H.H. | Abdallah, A.M. | Tayel, F.T.
The level concentrations of heavy metals (essential and nonessential) were measured in different marine biota including cephalopoda, bivalve, crustacean and fish. The results reveal that these organisms show more or less the same order of distribution for each of the metals studied. The average concentrations of heavy metals exhibited the following decreasing order: cephalopoda > bivalve > crustacean > fish. The levels of metals in all studied samples are still comparable to those in their corresponding in the Mediterranean Sea. K (98-181μg/g) and Ca (547-1472 μg/g) were present at the highest concentrations in all investigated samples. Octopus and Sepia do not follow the general pattern. The highest value of Metal Pollution Index (MPI) in cephalopod was recorded in octopus (9.55) followed by sepia (7.62). Among investigated bivalve, the highest values of MPI were recorded in Mactra coralline (2.87).
Show more [+] Less [-]National Institute of Oceanography and Fisheries (NIOF), Egypt
Show more [+] Less [-]The Egyptian Journal of Aquatic Research is abstracted in both of Zoological Record and Chemical Abstract since Volume 31(1), 2005. The Chief Editor: Prof. Fatma Aly Abd El-Razek E-mail: [email protected]
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Show more [+] Less [-]Cephalopoda, Bivalve, Mediterranean Sea
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