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Animal size impacts perfluoroalkyl acid (PFAA) concentrations in muscle tissue of estuarine fish and invertebrate species
2020
Taylor, Matthew D.
Environmental emissions of perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) often contaminate aquatic ecosystems and accumulate in the species therein. This can represent an exposure pathway for human populations where seafood is consumed. Concentrations of PFAAs in water breathing animals may be a function of many different factors, however, little is known about how these different factors impact contaminant accumulation in estuarine and marine species. This study explores the relationships between PFAA accumulation and two key variables, animal size and sediment concentrations, for a number of important seafood species. Sixty Dusky Flathead (Platycephalus fuscus), 58 Mulloway (Argyrosomus japonicus) and 53 Giant Mud Crab (Scylla serrata) were tested for perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS), perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorohexane sulfonate (PFHxS) in edible tissues, and the concentrations compared with animal size and sediment concentrations at the location of capture. PFAAs showed a high degree of variation among species, and PFOA and PFHxS were only common in Giant Mud Crab. Log-transformed PFOS concentrations in all three species showed negative correlations with animal size (weight). There was limited evidence for relationships between PFOS muscle tissue concentration and sediment PFOS concentration. The patterns observed are potentially explained by changes in trophic position, relative growth rate, consumption rate and metabolic rate, throughout the species life history. The results contrast with observations for other persistent organic pollutants, whereby larger individuals tend to carry greater contaminant loads. Future work is required to establish whether these patterns are evident for PFAAs in other species and contaminant sources.
Show more [+] Less [-]Allometric relationships to liver tissue concentrations of cyclic volatile methyl siloxanes in Atlantic cod
2014
Warner, Nicholas A. | Nøst, Therese H. | Andrade, Héctor | Christensen, Guttorm
Spatial distribution and relationship of allometric measurements (length, weight and age) to liver concentrations of cyclic volatile methyl siloxanes (cVMS) including octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane (D4), decamethylcyclopentasiloxane (D5) and dodecamethylcyclosiloxane (D6) in Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) collected near the community of Tromsø in Northern Norway were assessed. These congeners were benchmarked against known persistent polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs 153 and 180) to assess accumulation behavior of cVMS. D5 was the dominate cVMS detected in all fish livers with lipid normalized concentrations up to 10 times or greater than those observed for PCB 153 and 180. D4 and D6 concentration were negatively correlated with fish length and weight, indicating a greater elimination capacity compared to uptake processes with increasing fish size for these chemicals. These results indicate relationships between allometric measurements and cVMS concentrations may account for concentration variations observed within fish and should be assessed in future studies evaluating cVMS bioaccumulation potential.
Show more [+] Less [-]Sheaths of Zostera marina L. as ecological indicators of shoot length and the elemental stoichiometry of aboveground tissues
2020
Xu, Shaochun | Wang, Pengmei | Zhou, Yi | Wang, Feng | Zhang, Xiaomei | Gu, Ruiting | Xu, Shuai | Yue, Shidong | Zhang, Yu | Suonan, Zhaxi
Given a large quantity of epiphytes and other material attached on eelgrass leaf blades, we explored the relationship between eelgrass sheaths and different-aged leaf blades (1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th leaf blade) on nutrient content and their ratios (C, N, P, C/N, C/P, and N/P) to identify whether eelgrass sheaths could be used to instead of leaf blades in terms of nutrient content. In addition, we explored the relationship between eelgrass sheath length and shoot length. Results showed that there were significant relationships between the sheath and leaf blades in terms of N and P content and their ratios. For length analysis, there was a significant relationship between sheath length and shoot length, and shoot length was approximately four to five times (mean 4.4659) longer than sheath length, such that shoot length can be estimated by sheath length. These significant relationships suggest that eelgrass sheath could be used as a suitable predictor of leaf blade in length and nutrient stoichiometry, thus eelgrass sheath could be used as an indicator for further eelgrass nutrient monitoring and research.
Show more [+] Less [-]Development of a short-term chronic toxicity test with a tropical mysid
2016
Figuerêdo, Lívia Pitombeira de | Nilin, Jeamylle | Silva, Allyson Queiroz da | Loureiro, Susana | Costa-Lotufo, Letícia Veras
There is an increasing need to develop reliable methodologies for chronic toxicity testing using tropical species. The present work aimed at developing a suitable short-term chronic toxicity test with Mysidopsis juniae using zinc (Zn) and nickel (Ni) as model chemicals and growth (length and dry weight), survival, and egg production (number of females with eggs) as endpoints after seven days of exposure. Survival and growth of newborn M. juniae were affected by chronic exposure to zinc, while nickel affected only survival. For zinc, dry weight was the most sensitive endpoint with significant effects even at the lowest tested concentration (75μgZn·L−1), whereas for nickel, survival was the most sensitive parameter (LC20 of 26μgNi·L−1). Egg production was not affected. M. juniae short-term chronic testing is a sensitive approach to evaluating metal toxicity; further studies are necessary to assess chronic toxicity for others contaminants in the proposed assay.
Show more [+] Less [-]Imposex in the commercial snail Bolinus brandaris in the northwestern Mediterranean
1998
Sole, M. | Morcillo, Y. | Porte, C. (Environmental Chemistry Department, CID-CSIC, Jordi Girona, 18-26, 08034 Barcelona (Spain))
Biological and fisheries characteristics of red mullet (Mullus barbatus, L.) from the Montenegrin shelf | Ribarstveno-biološke karakteristike barbuna (Mullus barbatus, L.) na šelfu Crnogorskog primorja
2011
Mandić, M., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro) | Pešić, A., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro) | Đurović, M., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro) | Joksimović, A., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro) | Kasalica, O., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro) | Ikica, Z., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro)
The paper presents results of studies of biology and fisheries of red mullet (Mullus barbatus, L.) which was done within the frame of AdriaMed Trawl survey Project 2007/08. The Project encompassed monthly research of several target species in trawl fisheries of Montenegrin waters during one year in three most important fisheries ports in Montenegro (Bar, Budva and Herceg Novi). Total length of red mullet ranged from 9.1 to 21.5 cm with an average value of 15.1 cm. Length frequency distribution, length-weight relationship and sex ratio were analyzed.
Show more [+] Less [-]Length-weight relationship of the most common cephalopod species in Montenegrin trawl | Dužinsko-težinski odnos najzastupljenijih vrsta cephalopoda u kočarskom ribolovu na Crnogorskom primorju
2011
Ikica, Z., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro) | Kasalica, O., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro) | Mandić, M., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro) | Đurović, M., Institut za biologiju mora, Kotor (Montenegro)
A length-weight relationship (LW) for five cephalopod species, of which three decapod (Illex coindetii, Loligo vulgaris, Sepia officianlis) and two octopod species (Eledone cirrhosa, Eledone moschata) is given in this paper. The mean exponent b was found to be significantly lower than 3.
Show more [+] Less [-]Influence of Nitrogen Addition and Plant Root Parameters on Phytoremediation of Pyrene-contaminated Soil
2008
Thompson, Oriana A. | Wolf, Duane C. | Mattice, John D. | Thoma, Gregory J.
Phytoremediation is a method in which plants, soil microorganisms, amendments, and agronomic techniques interact to enhance contaminant degradation. We hypothesized that bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon L) and an appropriate amount of N fertilizer would improve remediation of pyrene-contaminated Captina silt loam soil. The soil was contaminated with 0 or 1,000 mg pyrene/kg of soil and amended with urea at pyrene-C:urea-N (C:N) ratios of 4.5:1, 9:1, 18:1, or unamended (36:1). Either zero, one, two, or three bermudagrass sprigs were planted per pot and -33 kPa moisture potential was maintained. Pyrene concentrations, inorganic-N levels, shoot and root parameters, and pyrene degrader microbial numbers were measured following a 100-day greenhouse study. At a C:N ratio of 4.5:1, the presence of plants increased pyrene biodegradation from 31% for the no plant treatment to a mean of 62% for the one, two, and three plant treatments. With no plants and C:N ratios of 4.5:1, 9:1, 18:1, and 36:1, the mean pyrene biodegradation was 31, 52, 77, and 88%, respectively, indicating that increased inorganic-N concentration in the soil reduced pyrene degradation in the treatments without plants. Additionally, none of the one, two, or three plant treatments at any of the C:N ratios were different with a mean pyrene degradation value of 69% after 100 days. Pyrene resulted in reduced shoot and root biomass, root length, and root surface area, but increased root diameter. The pyrene degrading microbial numbers were approximately 10,000-fold higher in the pyrene-contaminated soil compared to the control. At the highest N rate, bermudagrass increased pyrene degradation compared to the no plant treatment, however, in the unvegetated treatment pyrene degradation was reduced with added N.
Show more [+] Less [-]The length and weight growth of bleak Alburnus alburnus alborella Filippi from Lake Ohrid
2003
Talevski, T. (Hidrobioloski zavod, Ohrid (The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia))
In this paper are presented the length and weight growth of bleak Alburnus alburnus alborella Filippi from Lake Ohrid, R. Macedonia. The results of the length growth are presented by percent growth, absolute length growth in mm., the length growth rate (CI), the length growth constante (CIt), and growth characteristic (K). The weight growth are presented by percent growth and absolute weight growth in grams.
Show more [+] Less [-]Dynamics of shoot growth in two Calamagrostis villosa stands of the Kehyne Mts. [Czech Republic]
1995
Holub, P. (Akademie Ved, Brno (Czech Republic). Ustav Ekologie Krajiny)