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PCDD/F and dioxin-like PCB bioaccumulation by Manila clam from polluted areas of Venice lagoon (Italy)
2014
Sfriso, Adriano | Facca, Chiara | Raccanelli, Stefano
POP bioaccumulation pathways in the clam Tapes philippinarum were examined for two years from juveniles to adult size. Two polluted sites, one with sandy sediment, the other muddy were compared with a reference site characterized by low contamination levels. Juvenile clams coming from a hatchery were reared both on the sediment and in nets suspended at 30 cm from the bottom. POP changes in clam tissue were related to the concentrations recorded in sediments and in the particulate matter during the entire fattening period. Results provided interesting data on the relationships between environmental contamination and bioaccumulation. Contrary to studies on the decontamination times of the clams collected in polluted areas, this work investigates the preferential clam bioaccumulation pathways during growth under different environmental conditions. In general POP bioaccumulation resulted to be correlated to concentrations in SPM rather than in sediments and was higher in S-clams rather than in B-clams.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Impacts of a local music festival on fish stress hormone levels and the adjacent underwater soundscape
2020
An understudied consequence of coastal urbanization on marine environments is sound pollution. While underwater anthropogenic sounds are recognized as a threat to aquatic organisms, little is known about the effects of above-surface coastal sound pollution on adjacent underwater soundscapes and the organisms inhabiting them. Here, the impact of noise from the 2019 Ultra Music Festival® in Miami, FL, USA was assessed at the University of Miami Experimental Hatchery (UMEH) located directly adjacent to the music festival and on underwater sound levels in Bear Cut, a nearby water channel. In addition, stress hormone levels in fish held at UMEH were measured before and during the festival. Air sound levels recorded at UMEH during the Ultra Music Festival did not exceed 72 dBA and 98 dBC. The subsurface sound intensity levels in the low frequency band increased by 2–3 dB re 1 μPa in the adjacent waterway, Bear Cut, and by 7–9 dB re 1 μPa in the fish tanks at UMEH. Gulf toadfish (Opsanus beta) housed in the UMEH tanks experienced a 4–5 fold increase in plasma cortisol, their main stress hormone, during the first night of the Ultra Music Festival compared to two baseline samples taken 3 weeks and 4 days before Ultra. While this study offers preliminary insights into this type of sound pollution, more research is needed to conclude if Ultra caused a stress response in wild organisms and to fully understand the implications of this type of sound pollution.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Trends of polychlorinated dioxins, polychlorinated furans, and dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls in Chinook and Coho salmonid eggs from a Great Lakes tributary
2019
Garner, Andrew J. | Pagano, James J.
Eggs from mature Chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and Coho (Oncorhynchus kisutch) salmon were collected between 2004 and 2014 from the Salmon River fish hatchery in Altmar, New York. The egg samples were analyzed for seventeen polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs) and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs), as well as four dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (DL-PCBs) using USEPA methods 1613 and 1668. Salmonid eggs were chosen as a tissue of interest since salmon feed at all trophic levels of the food web as they grow, and spawn in a narrow range of ages providing consistent, representative, and temporal samples of contaminant exposure. First-order decay models indicate decreasing trends for all select contaminants in both species, expressed by a toxic equivalence (TEQ) half-life (t₁/₂) of 11 years in Chinook and Coho eggs. No significant statistical difference in contaminant elimination rates were noted between species. TEQ elimination rates for Coho and Chinook eggs were not significantly different (p > 0.05) when compared with published Lake Ontario whole-fish lake trout elimination rates. Our research demonstrates that salmonid eggs are an effective means to assess PCDD, PCDF, and DL-PCB exposures and long-term trends in the Great Lakes.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]The Kuril Islands as a potential region for aquaculture: Trace elements in chum salmon
2016
Khristoforova, Nadezhda K. | Tsygankov, Vasiliy Yu | Lukyanova, Olga N. | Boyarova, Margarita D.
The Kuril Islands region is considered promising for development of salmon aquaculture. There are 41 salmon fish hatcheries in the Sakhalin Island and the Kuril Islands, 34 of them are hatcheries of the chum. Therefore, concentrations of six elements (Zn, Cu, Cd, Pb, As, and Hg) were determined in chum salmon were caught in this region. The contents of toxic elements (Cd, Pb, As, and Hg) don't exceed their maximum permissible concentrations (MPC) according to the Russian sanitary standards, but concentration of Pb are closely to MPC. Increased concentrations of Pb in wild chum have the natural origin. The unusual conditions of the Western Pacific are formed under the influence such factors as volcanism and upwelling.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Scallop larvae hatcheries as source of bacteria carrying genes encoding for non-enzymatic phenicol resistance
2015
Miranda, Claudio D. | Rojas, Rodrigo | Geisse, Julieta | Romero S., Jaime | González-Rocha, Gerardo
The main aim of the study was to evaluate the role of scallop hatcheries as source of the floR and cmlA genes. A number of 133 and 121 florfenicol-resistant strains were isolated from scallop larval cultures prior to their transfer to seawater and from effluent samples from 2 commercial hatcheries and identified by 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis, observing a predominance of the Pseudomonas, Pseudoalteromonas and Halomonas genera and exhibiting an important incidence of co-resistance to streptomycin, oxytetracycline and co-trimoxazole. A high percentage of strains from both hatcheries carried the floR gene (68.4% and 89.3% of strains), whereas a lower carriage of the cmlA gene was detected (27.1% and 54.5% of strains). The high prevalence of floR-carrying bacteria in reared scallop larvae and hatchery effluents contributes to enrich the marine resistome in marine environments, prompting the need of a continuous surveillance of these genes in the mariculture environments.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Role of shellfish hatchery as a reservoir of antimicrobial resistant bacteria
2013
Miranda, Claudio D. | Rojas, Rodrigo | Garrido, Marcela | Geisse, Julieta | González, Gerardo
The main aim of this study was to determine the occurrence of resistant bacteria in florfenicol-treated and untreated scallop larval cultures from a commercial hatchery and to characterize some selected florfenicol-resistant strains. Larval cultures from untreated and treated rearing tanks exhibited percentages of copiotrophic bacteria resistant to florfenicol ranging from 0.03% to 10.67% and 0.49–18.34%, respectively, whereas florfenicol resistance among oligotrophic bacteria varied from 1.44% to 35.50% and 3.62–95.71%, from untreated and treated larvae, respectively. Florfenicol resistant microbiota from reared scallop larvae mainly belonged to the Pseudomonas and Pseudoalteromonas genus and were mainly resistant to florfenicol, chloramphenicol, streptomycin and co-trimoxazole. This is the first study reporting antimicrobial resistant bacteria associated to a shellfish hatchery and the results suggest that a continuous surveillance of antimicrobial resistance even in absence of antibacterial therapy is urgently required to evaluate potential undesirable consequences on the surrounding environments.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]On the possibility to produce again oysters Crassostrea gigas in the North Médoc salt marshes (Gironde estuary, Southwestern France): A comparison study of metals bioaccumulation in spats 13years after
2016
Baudrimont, Magalie | Chelini, Audrey | Gourves, Pierre-Yves | Maury-Brachet, Régine | Legeay, Alexia
The Gironde Estuary is known for its historic poly-metallic contamination, leading to levels of Cd in oysters Crassostrea gigas above the human consumption limit. However, since 25years, Cd concentrations progressively decreased in the estuary and the question is raised if the same evolution occurred in the North Médoc salt marshes. In this aim, we analyzed 12 metals in juveniles of oysters transplanted from a hatchery on a 12months period in 2 salt marshes. Moreover, the comparison of four metals already measured 13years ago was conducted.The major results showed an overall decrease of the metals in the salt marshes, with a significant decrease of Cd reaching 80% compared to the Gironde estuary where it occurs for only 50% between 2001 and 2014. The concentrations in 2014 remained below the human consumption threshold, suggesting the possibility to produce again oysters in the salt marshes.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Combined effects of temperature and copper and S-metolachlor on embryo-larval development of the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas
2017
Gamain, Perrine | Gonzalez, Patrice | Cachot, Jérôme | Clérandeau, Christelle | Mazzella, Nicolas | Gourves, Pierre Yves | Morin, Bénédicte
This study evaluates the combined effects of two contaminants (copper and a herbicide S-metolachlor) and temperature on the early life stages of the Pacific oyster Crasssotrea gigas, which is native to Arcachon Bay (southwest France). The responses of D-larvae, obtained from wild and cultivated oysters, were investigated for one year during the oyster breeding period at different sampling sites and compared with the response of D-larvae from a commercial hatchery. Embryotoxicity was measured by considering the percentage of abnormal D-shaped larvae. Normal development of embryos occurred only from 22°C to 26°C. There were synergistic effects of copper at low and high temperatures. Native oysters appear particularly sensitive to an increase in water temperature, suggesting a future increase in the percentage of larval abnormalities as a result of global climate change. Hatchery oysters represent a good alternative model for studying the effects of both pollutants and climate change stressors.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Antibiotic resistance of bacteria isolated from shrimp hatcheries and cultural ponds on Donghai Island, China
2011
Zhang, Yu Bin | Li, Yuan | Sun, Xing Li
The resistance of bacteria to 12 different antibiotics was investigated in shrimp farms on Donghai Island, China. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria were found to be widespread in shrimp farms, indicating a high environmental risk. Further, significant differences were found in bacterial strains among farms (ANOVA, p<0.05), showing resistance to antibiotics such as ampicillin, trimethoprim, compound sinomi, tetracycline, chloramphenicol and cefazolin. No significant differences in antibiotic resistance were found among 6 hatcheries evaluated in this study (ANOVA, p>0.05), between exalted and traditional shrimp ponds (ANOVA, p>0.05), and between cultural ponds and corresponding control water source sites (T-test, p>0.05). In cultural ponds, no significant difference in bacterial resistance to antibiotics was found between water and sediment (T-test, p>0.05), and antibiotic resistance of bacteria from water showed a significant positive correlation with that from sediment (p<0.05). Therefore, our study indicates that bacterial multiple antibiotic resistance (MAR) is more widespread in shrimp hatcheries than ponds.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]The effect of acclimation temperature and optimal temperature gradient for egg and larvae of silver moony (Monodactylus argenteus) during the early ontogenesis
2022
Thomas, Dani | Rekha, Mattalakkal Unnikrishnan | Angel, Jesudhas Raymond Jani | Sreekanth, Giri Bhavan | Sukumaran, Krishna | Sandeep, Kizhakkekarammal Puthiyedathu | Bera, Aritra | Thiagarajan, Govindarajan | Kailasam, Muniyandi
The early life history of a fish species is regulated by temperature, the most critical environmental cue. Thus, identifying the gradient of temperature that optimises the early development of a species is a prerequisite for standardising hatchery technology. Silver moony, Monodactylus argenteus is a tropical brackishwater ornamental fish that holds scope for the Indian and Global ornamental fish industry. This study unravels the effect of water temperature increments (26, 28, 30, 32, and 34 °C) on embryonic development, hatching, and survival rate, as well as the growth profile and survival rate of larvae at 5 days post-hatch (5 dph). Experiments were conducted to find out the optimal temperature gradient for egg incubation and early larval rearing. The experiment results revealed that the embryogenesis was accelerated at increasing temperatures, especially after the gastrula stage, and apparent differences were evident in each stage. However, the morphological development profile at each embryonic stage was similar throughout the temperature range. The incubation period differed significantly (P < 0.05) between the temperature gradients. The highest rates of hatching (90–100%) and survival after 12 hph were observed at 28 ºC and 30 ºC. Hatched-out larvae demonstrated the highest total length (1.92 ± 0.02 µm) at 34 °C, and the total length decreased at lower temperature levels. The yolk sac volume of larvae was shrunken with an increase in temperature, and a significant difference was observed between the studied temperatures. However, the oil globule diameter did not differ between the different temperatures. The total length and growth rate of 5 dph larvae were significantly different among the temperature treatments and increased with increasing temperature. In contrast, the survival rate of 5 dph larvae was highest at the range of 26 ºC and 30 ºC. The results indicated that the change in temperature from the spawning temperature (29 ± 1 °C) negatively influenced embryogenesis and the early development of M. argenteus. Based on the experimental results, the growth and survival of embryo and larvae were found to be optimum at 28 to 30 ºC. This prediction is of great importance for the effective management in the hatchery production phase, and especially the temperature could be considered the critical environmental cue.
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