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Mercury and arsenic in processed fins from nine of the most traded shark species in the Hong Kong and China dried seafood markets: The potential health risks of shark fin soup Full text
2020
Garcia Barcia, Laura | Argiro, Juana | Babcock, Elizabeth A. | Cai, Yong | Shea, Stanley K.H. | Chapman, Demian D.
Shark fin is one of Asia's most valued dried seafood products, with over 80 shark species traded in Hong Kong [HK]. We analyzed processed shark fins from mainland China and HK markets (n = 267) for mercury, methyl‑mercury, and arsenic, to inform consumers, policy makers and public health officials on the health risks of ingesting fins from nine of the most common shark species in the fin trade. Fins from all species frequently exceed Hg limits established by HK authorities. Most of the mercury found is in the form of methyl‑mercury (69.0 ± 33.5%). Five species surpass methyl‑mercury PTWIs and blue shark fins can exceed inorganic arsenic BMDL₀.₅. Species-of-origin was a significant predictor of heavy metal concentrations, with higher mercury concentrations associated with coastal sharks and lower arsenic levels found with increasing shark trophic level. Species-specific labeling would help consumers avoid shark fin products that pose the highest health risk.
Show more [+] Less [-]Characteristics of global port phytoplankton and implications for current ballast water regulations Full text
2020
Soler-Figueroa, Brenda M. | Fontaine, Diana N. | Carney, Katharine J. | Ruiz, Gregory M. | Tamburri, Mario N.
The International Maritime Organization and U.S. Coast Guard have implemented regulations to reduce introductions of non-indigenous species via ballast water (BW). For phytoplankton, regulations limit discharges to <10 live/viable cells mL⁻¹ (size: 10–50 μm), ignoring other size fractions. Additionally, challenge conditions of 100 (shipboard) and 1000 (land-based) cells mL⁻¹ are required in BW management system certification testing. How these requirements correspond to natural phytoplankton populations is poorly resolved. We analyzed phytoplankton samples from 31 major ports to evaluate: a) how natural communities compare to challenge requirements and b) abundances of unregulated size fractions (i.e., <10 and ≥50 μm). None of the ports met land-based challenge conditions, and only 32% met requirements for shipboard testing. Approximately 71% of organisms ≥50 μm were centric diatoms, also unregulated by current protocols. This study demonstrates that current regulations do not consider natural phytoplankton populations, limiting control efforts for potentially harmful non-indigenous species.
Show more [+] Less [-]Vessel-based photographic assessment of beach litter in remote coasts. A wide scale application in Saronikos Gulf, Greece Full text
2020
Papachristopoulou, Irene | Filippides, Anastasios | Fakiris, Elias | Papatheodorou, George
The abundance of marine debris was quantified for a total of sixty-two inaccessible beaches in the western Saronikos Gulf, Greece. High resolution images were obtained through vessel-based photography survey, merged into seamless photomosaics, and manually processed to quantify beach litter abundance. A sample of four selected beaches were subjected to detailed photography followed by beach macro-litter (≥ 2.5 cm) in-situ sampling surveys over a period of one year, to calibrate and validate the proposed method. Regression analysis between photographic and in-situ data showed a significant correlation, hence providing a highly accurate regression model to assess the real number of beach litter stranded on the rest of the investigated beaches, exhibiting clear correlations to the hydrodynamic status of the area and, provide an indication of the main litter sources. The proposed method is an easily applicable and useful tool for fast and low-cost macro-litter monitoring in extended, remote coastlines, when only photographic data are available.
Show more [+] Less [-]Health risk assessment of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in coastal soils of Koh Samed Island (Thailand) after the oil spill incident in 2013 Full text
2020
Apiratikul, Ronbanchob | Pongpiachan, Siwatt | Hashmi, Muhammad Zaffar
Health risks of human exposures to 12 Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in coastal soils of Koh Samed Island (KSI), Thailand, were evaluated after the coastal areas were cleaned up of the 2013 oil-spill contamination. The risk assessment quantified both total cancer and non-cancer risks for four groups of receptors using average PAHs concentrations. Two exposure pathways (incidental ingestion and dermal contact) were selected to evaluate the risks, and three methods were used to calculate the total cancer risks to determine an appropriate assessment method. The non-cancer risk was represented by the total Hazard Index (HI). The contributions of each PAH to the total cancer risk and total HI were also investigated. The total cancer risk (3.53×10⁻¹⁰ to 9.12×10⁻⁸) and total HI (4.35×10⁻⁶ ᵗᵒ ².¹³×¹⁰⁻³) from this work were relatively lower than the USEPA baselines (10⁻⁶ for the cancer risk and 1 for the HI) and were quite low when compared with other works in the literature. Benzo(a)pyrene made the highest contribution to the total cancer risk (61.82%), while benzo[g,h,i]perylene made the highest contribution to the total HI (62.41%). In regard to the contributions of the two exposure routes, dermal contact contributed the most to the total cancer risk, while incidental ingestion contributed the most to the total HI.
Show more [+] Less [-]Long-term monitoring emphasizes impacts of the dredging on dissolved Cu and Pb contamination along with ultraplankton distribution and structure in Toulon Bay (NW Mediterranean Sea, France) Full text
2020
Layglon, Nicolas | Misson, Benjamin | Durieu, Gaël | Coclet, Clément | D'Onofrio, Sébastien | Đức Huy, | François, David | Mullot, Jean-Ulrich | Mounier, Stéphane | Lenoble, Véronique | Omanović, Dario | Garnier, Cédric
A long-term monitoring during dredging and non-dredging periods was performed. Total and dissolved Cu and Pb concentrations, DGT-labile Pb, ultraphytoplankton abundance and structure were monitored at four sites: dredging site, dumping site (inside/outside of a geotextile bag) and reference site. During the reference period (non-dredging), an increasing contamination in Pb, Cu and a progressive shift from Synechococcus to photosynthetic picoeukaryotes dominance was observed from reference to dumping site. Pb concentrations were significantly higher during dredging period, pointing out sediment resuspension as Pb major source of contamination. Unlike Pb, Cu concentrations were not statistically different during the two periods. Dredging period did not impact on ultraphytoplankton abundance and structure but influence heterotrophic prokaryotes abundance. Sediment resuspension is therefore a major driver of chemical and biological qualities in Toulon Bay. Furthermore, although the geotextile bag reduces particulate transport of the dredged sediment, the transport in the dissolved phase remains a major problem.
Show more [+] Less [-]Spatial distribution and functional profile of the bacterial community in response to eutrophication in the subtropical Beibu Gulf, China Full text
2020
Li, Nan | Chen, Xing | Zhao, Huaxian | Tang, Jinli | Jiang, Gonglingxia | Li, Zhuoting | Li, Xiaoli | Chen, Si | Zou, Shuqi | Dong, Ke | Xu, Qiangsheng
In this study, we investigated the specific bacterial distribution and the response of bacterial communities to shifts in environmental factors in the subtropical Beibu Gulf, southern China. The abundances of Actinobacteria, Bacilli, Planctomycetia, Thermoleophilia, Anaerolineae, and Synechococcophycideae were significantly higher in high eutrophic samples than in medium eutrophic and oligotrophic samples. Bacterial alpha-diversity was found greater in high eutrophication samples than in the other samples. Besides, Ponticaulis koreensis, Nautella italic, Anaerospora hongkongensis, Candidatus Aquiluna rubra, and Roseovarius pacificus were sensitive to trophic variation and thus could be used as eco-markers. In addition, the relative abundances of functional genes involving carbohydrate and amino acid metabolism were very high among the samples. We also found temperature, Chl-a, TDN and NO₃⁻ were the main environmental drivers of bacterial community structure. Overall, this study provides new insight into the composition of bacterial community and function response to gradients of eutrophication in Beibu Gulf.
Show more [+] Less [-]Marine litter and wood debris as habitat and vector for the range expansion of invasive corals (Tubastraea spp.) Full text
2020
Mantelatto, Marcelo Checoli | Póvoa, Alain Alves | Skinner, Luis Felipe | Araujo, Fábio Vieira de | Creed, Joel Christopher
Tubastraea coccinea Lesson, 1830 and T. tagusensis Wells 1982 are azooxanthellate corals non-native to Brazil and introduced through fouling on oil platforms, the primary vector. They first invaded the tropical rocky reefs at Ilha Grande Bay (southwest Atlantic Ocean), during the early 1990s. Currently, at some Brazilian locations these species occupy 80% of the benthos of the shallow subtidal. They cause economic and environmental impacts by fouling shipping and modifying native communities. This study provides observations of an additional mechanism of secondary dispersal by T. coccinea and T. tagusensis that were seen attached to floating wood debris and marine litter, which are highly abundant in the region. Such rafting corals have been found adjacent to invaded reefs and stranded on beaches. These observations indicate that transport by rafting over long distances may be another mechanism of range expansion and secondary introduction of these invasive species within the region.
Show more [+] Less [-]Making Waves Perspectives of Modelling and Monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 in Aquatic Environment for COVID-19 Pandemic Full text
2020
Manish Kumar, | Mohapatra, Sanjeeb | Mazumder, Payal | Singh, Ashwin | Honda, Ryo | Lin, Chuxia | Kumari, Rina | Goswami, Ritusmita | Jha, Pawan Kumar | Vithanage, Meththika | Kuroda, Keisuke
Prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in the aquatic environment pertaining to the COVID-19 pandemic has been a global concern. Though SARS-CoV-2 is known as a respiratory virus, its detection in faecal matter and wastewater demonstrates its enteric involvement resulting in vulnerable aquatic environment. Here, we provide the latest updates on wastewater-based epidemiology, which is gaining interest in the current situation as a unique tool of surveillance and monitoring of the disease. Transport pathways with its migration through wastewater to surface and subsurface waters, probability of infectivity and ways of inactivation of SARS-CoV-2 are discussed in detail. Epidemiological models, especially compartmental projections, have been explained with an emphasis on its limitation and the assumptions on which the future predictions of disease propagation are based. Besides, this review covers various predictive models to track and project disease spread in the future and gives an insight into the probability of a future outbreak of the disease.
Show more [+] Less [-]Community-based monitoring detects catastrophic earthquake and tsunami impacts on seagrass beds in the Solomon Islands Full text
2020
Moseby, K.E. | Daniels, A. | Duri, V. | Tropa, W. | Welma, S. | Bero, A. | Soapi, K.
Community-based monitoring detects catastrophic earthquake and tsunami impacts on seagrass beds in the Solomon Islands Full text
2020
Moseby, K.E. | Daniels, A. | Duri, V. | Tropa, W. | Welma, S. | Bero, A. | Soapi, K.
Tetepare Island in the Solomon Islands is the largest uninhabited island in the South Pacific and supports seagrass beds inside fringing reefs along its coastline. We monitored the diversity and abundance of seagrass species on Tetepare and nearby sparsely-populated Rendova Island over a 12 year period, 4 years before and up to 8 years after a major earthquake and tsunami event in January 2010. Both seagrass cover and diversity declined after the tsunami and had not reached pre-Tsunami levels after 8 years. Seagrass cover declined the fastest at sites on Rendova, closest to the epicentre, declining from 50% to <10% cover within 12 months of the earthquake. At sites within the Tetepare MPA, seagrass cover took longer to decline and dropped from an average of 50% to <10% within 2 years and became dominated by Halophila ovalis. Species richness declined from 9 to 4 species with some species such as Syringodium isoetifolium disappearing from monitoring sites. Community-based monitoring was an effective method of documenting long term changes in seagrass cover and long-term monitoring is required to determine if seagrass beds are permanently altered or return to pre-tsunami conditions.
Show more [+] Less [-]Community-based monitoring detects catastrophic earthquake and tsunami impacts on seagrass beds in the Solomon Islands Full text
2020
Moseby, K.E. | Daniels, A. | Duri, V. | Tropa, W. | Welma, S. | Bero, A. | Soapi, Katy M.
Seagrass beds are an important component of the marine ecosystem and play a significant role in coastal protection and maintaining fish production. Despite a global decline in seagrass, the Indo-Pacific region supports a high diversity of seagrass species with many seagrass beds still intact and healthy. Tetepare Island in the Solomon Islands is the largest uninhabited island in the South Pacific and supports seagrass beds inside fringing reefs along its southern coastline. We monitored the diversity and abundance of seagrass species on Tetepare and nearby sparsely-populated Rendova Island over a 12â�
Show more [+] Less [-]Assessment of current natural and anthropogenic radionuclide activity concentrations in the bottom sediments from the Barents Sea Full text
2020
Yakovlev, Evgeny | Puchkov, Andrey
The article is devoted to the study of the activity values of natural radionuclides ⁴⁰K, ²³²Th and ²²⁶Ra and technogenic radionuclide ¹³⁷Cs in the bottom sediments of the Barents Sea, which is distinguished from the rest of the Arctic seas by the fact that the largest number of radiation objects are concentrated here. The activity levels of natural radionuclides were within the range of activity values corresponding to marine sediments around the world. The highest radionuclide activities were found within the deepwater shelf of the Barents Sea. The current level of activity of the technogenic radionuclide ¹³⁷Cs is low and does not exceed 6.5 Bq·kg⁻¹. However, due to global climatic changes, the secondary source of radiation pollution of the sea may be the Novaya Zemlya ice sheet, in which huge quantities of technogenic radionuclides were deposited during atmospheric tests of the 1950s and 1960s.
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