Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18350
Título: Mercury levels in muscle of six species of turtles eaten by people along the Rio Negro of the Amazon basin
Autor: Schneider, Larissa
Belger, Lauren
Burger, Joanna
Vogt, Richard Carl
Ferrara, Camila Rudge
Palavras-chave: Biological Marker
Mercury
Bioindicator
Health Risk
Mercury (element)
River Pollution
Turtle
Animals Experiment
Animals Tissue
Body Weight
Chelus Fimbriatus
Chemical Analysis
Concentration (parameters)
Controlled Study
Health Hazard
Human
Muscle Level
Nonhuman
Peltocephalus Dumerilianus
Podocnemis Erythrocephala
Podocnemis Expansa
Podocnemis Sextuberculata
Podocnemis Unifilis
Priority Journal
Sex Difference
Turtle
Animal
Environmental Monitoring
Female
Food Contamination
Humans
Male
Mercury Compounds
Muscle, Skeletal
Rivers
Species Specificity
Turtles
Water Pollutants, Chemical
Rio Negro [south America]
Chelus Fimbriatus
Peltocephalus Dumerilianus
Podocnemis Erythrocephala
Podocnemis Expansa
Podocnemis Sextuberculata
Podocnemis Unifilis
Testudines
Data do documento: 2010
Revista: Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
É parte de: Volume 58, Número 2, Pags. 444-450
Abstract: Mercury levels in the Amazon River are generally high, but there are no published studies on Hg levels in turtles from the region. In this study, levels of Hg were examined in the muscle of six species of turtles in the Rio Negro in the Amazon basin of Brazil, including Podocnemis unifilis, Podocnemis expansa, Podocnemis erythrocephala, Podocnemis sextuberculata, Peltocephalus dumerilianus, and Chelus fimbriatus. It is important to analyze Hg levels in chelonians in this region because of the potential health risk to humans and other receptors that eat them, as well as their potential use as bioindicators. The effect of sex, weight, and carapace length on Hg concentrations in turtle muscle was examined to determine if the levels represent a health risk to riverine people. There was a significant interspecific difference in Hg levels but no differences as a function of size or gender. The highest Hg level was found in Chelus fimbriatus (mean = 432 ppb, standard deviation ± 196 ppb), followed by Peltocephalus dumerilianus (106 ± 41 ppb), Podocnemis expansa (62 ± 49 ppb), P. sextuberculata (61 ± 40 ppb), P. unilifis (35 plusmn; 17 ppb), and P. erythrocephala (33.1 ± 17 ppb). Of the species studied, the piscivorous C. fimbriatus had the highest Hg level. Hg levels in turtles were similar to the levels found in fish from the same basin. Levels of Hg in the muscle of C. fimbriatus are sufficiently high to pose a potential risk to humans who consume them. This study represents the first comparative study of Hg levels in muscle of six species of turtles. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2009.
DOI: 10.1007/s00244-009-9358-z
Aparece nas coleções:Artigos

Arquivos associados a este item:
Não existem arquivos associados a este item.


Os itens no repositório estão protegidos por copyright, com todos os direitos reservados, salvo quando é indicado o contrário.