Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18014
Título: Mercury concentration in the spectacled caiman and black caiman (Alligatoridae) of the Amazon: Implications for human health
Autor: Schneider, Larissa
Peleja, Reinaldo Pacheco
Kluczkovski, Augusto
Freire, Guilherme Martinez
Marioni, Boris
Vogt, Richard Carl
Silveira, Ronis da
Palavras-chave: Mercury
Bioindicator
Concentration (composition)
Crocodilian
Health Risk
Mercury (element)
Predator-prey Interaction
Risk Factor
World Health Organization
Caiman
Chemical Analysis
Concentration (parameters)
Correlation Analysis
Environmental Exposure
Environmental Monitoring
Food Intake
Food Safety
Melanosuchus Niger
Muscle
Nonhuman
Predator
Priority Journal
Risk Assessment
River Basin
Sex Difference
Tail
Water Contamination
Alligators And Crocodiles
Animal
Body Size
Environmental Monitoring
Female
Food Contamination
Humans
Male
Mercury
Muscle, Skeletal
Risk Assessment
Rivers
Sex Factors
Tissue Distribution
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Amazonas
Alligatorinae
Animalsia
Caiman
Caiman Crocodilus
Caiman Crocodilus
Melanosuchus Niger
Reptilia
Data do documento: 2012
Revista: Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
É parte de: Volume 63, Número 2, Pags. 270-279
Abstract: Mercury (Hg) concentrations in the Amazon are generally high, but no studies have been published on Hg concentrations in caimans (Alligatoridae) from the region. Aiming for sizes representative of caimans traded for food in the Amazon, we measured Hg concentration in tail muscle of spectacled caiman (Caiman crocodilus crocodilus) and black caiman (Melanosuchus niger) from the Purus River basin. The information on Hg concentration in caimans from this area is important because of the potential health risk to humans and other animals that eat them as well as the potential use of these top-level predators as bioindicators. There were no significant interspecific or sex differences in Hg concentrations. The mean Hg concentration was 291.2 μg/kg in C. c. crocodilus and 193.9 μg/kg in M. niger. A significant positive correlation between Hg concentration and size was found for M. niger (p = 0.005) but not for C. c. crocodilus. Our Hg sample from M. niger corresponded to the size of M. niger collected for commercial trade, but our Hg sample from C. c. crocodilus turned out to be significantly smaller than the trade samples (p = 0.004), but this difference is not pertinent in the absence of a correlation between size and Hg concentration for this species. Although there are no standards for reptile meat, both species had mean Hg concentrations lower than the maximum allowable level of 500 μg/kg Hg recommended by the World Health Organization and by the Brazilian Health Ministry for fish. However, by calculating daily consumptions limits and number of meals per month that can be safely consumed, we found that consumers who eat caimans frequently may be at risk for Hg-related health problems. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2012.
DOI: 10.1007/s00244-012-9768-1
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