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Title: | Assessment of heavy metals bioavailability and toxicity toward Vibrio fischeri in sediment of the Huelva estuary |
Authors: | Rosado, Daniel Usero, José Morillo, José |
Keywords: | Aliivibrio fischeri Biological Availability Environmental Monitoring Environmental Pollution Estuaries Geologic Sediments Metals, Heavy Spain Water Pollutants, Chemical Andalucia Huelva Estuary Huelva [Andalucia] Odiel Estuary Spain Tinto Estuary Bacteria (microorganisms) Vibrio fischeri Biochemistry Carbonates Heavy metals Metals Sediments Toxicity carbonic acid derivative heavy metal sulfanilamide heavy metal water pollutant Bioavailability Bioavailable metals Huelva estuary Luminescent bacteria Polluted sediments Sediment toxicity Sequential extraction Similar pattern bacterium bioassay bioavailability bioindicator carbonate estuarine sediment heavy metal mortality sediment pollution toxicity Aliivibrio fischeri Article bioassay bioavailability estuary heavy metal poisoning littoral nonhuman sediment toxicity assay toxicity testing Aliivibrio fischeri analysis bioavailability drug effects environmental monitoring growth, development and aging microbiology pollution procedures sediment Spain toxicity water pollutant Estuaries |
Issue Date: | 2016 |
Publisher: | Elsevier Ltd |
Abstract: | Relationship between toxicity and bioavailable metals in sediments from the Huelva estuary and its littoral of influence was analyzed. Toxicity was assessed with Microtox® bioassay using a marine luminescent bacterium: Vibrio fischeri. Bioavailable metals were considered as both, acid extractable fraction of BCR procedure and the sum of exchangeable and bound to carbonates fractions of Tessier sequential extraction. A bioavailable metals index was calculated to integrate results in a single figure.Toxicity and bioavailable metals showed a similar pattern. Higher levels were found in the estuary than in the littoral (140 TU/g). In Huelva estuary, highest levels were found in the Tinto estuary (5725 TU/g), followed by the Odiel estuary (5100 TU/g) and the Padre Santo Canal (2500 TU/g). Results in this area were well over than those in nearby estuaries. Furthermore, they are similar to or even higher than those in other polluted sediments around the world.Bioavailable metal index showed a stronger correlation with acid extractable fraction of BCR (R2 = 0.704) than that for the sum of exchangeable and bound to carbonates fractions of Tessier (R2 = 0.661). These results suggest that bioavailable metals are an important source of sediment toxicity in the Huelva estuary and its littoral of influence, an area with one of the highest mortality risks of Spain. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. |
URI: | https://dspace.utpl.edu.ec/bitstreams/2-s2.0-84961147483.pdf http://dspace.utpl.edu.ec/handle/123456789/69534 |
ISSN: | 00456535 |
Appears in Collections: | Artículos de revistas Científicas |
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