Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18469
Title: Mercury bioacumulation in four tissues of Podocnemis erythrocephala (Podocnemididae: Testudines) as a function of water parameters
Authors: Schneider, Larissa
Belger, Lauren
Burger, Joanna
Vogt, Richard Carl
Keywords: Alkylation
Biochemistry
Blood
Catchments
Diffusers (optical)
Dissolution
Ecology
Fire Hazards
Liver
Mercury (metal)
Methylation
Ocean Habitats
Organic Carbon
Radar Imaging
Regression Analysis
Risk Perception
Soils
Tracking Radar
Water Analysis
Amazon
Mercury
Physical Factors
Podocnemis
Rio Negro
Size
Turtles
Muscle
Biological Marker
Mercury
Organic Carbon
Water
Bioaccumulation
Bioindicator
Blood
Body Size
Chemical Analysis
Dissolved Organic Carbon
Environmental Factor
Gis
Health Risk
Mercury (element)
Methylation
Multiple Regression
Muscle
Ph
Radar Imagery
Turtle
Animals Tissue
Aquatic Environment
Bioaccumulation
Blood
Chemical Analysis
Environmental Factor
Floodplain
Forest
Habitat
Limnology
Liver
Multiple Regression
Muscle
Nonhuman
Ph
Podocnemis Erythrocephala
Priority Journal
Risk
Soil
Turtle
Animal
Body Size
Ecosystem
Environmental Monitoring
Fresh Water
Geography
Health Status
Humans
Liver
Mercury
Muscle, Skeletal
Turtles
Podocnemididae
Podocnemis
Podocnemis Erythrocephala
Testudines
Issue Date: 2009
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Science of the Total Environment
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 407, Número 3, Pags. 1048-1054
Abstract: A number of environmental factors influence the dynamics of Hg in aquatic ecosystems, yet few studies have examined these factors for turtles, especially from South America. Red-headed river turtle (Podocnemis erythrocephala) is easy to capture in the black waters of Rio Negro, making it the turtle species that is consumed most often by people of the region. In this study, environmental factors and turtle size were investigated to determine their influence on the Hg concentration in blood, muscle, liver and carapace of the red-headed river turtle. Factors investigated included turtle length, pH, dissolved organic carbon and availability of potential methylation sites (floodplain forests and hydromorphic soils). The study was conducted in the Rio Negro basin, where we collected water and turtle blood, muscle, liver and carapace samples from 12 tributaries for chemical analysis. Through radar imagery and existing soil maps with GIS, the percentage of alluvial floodplains and hydromorphic soils (potential methylation sites) was estimated for each drainage basin at sampling points. The mean Hg concentration in blood of P. erythrocephala was 1.64 ng g- 1 (SD = 1.36), muscle 33 ng g- 1 (SD = 11), liver 470 ng g- 1 (SD = 313) and carapace 68 ng g- 1 (SD = 32). Sex or length did not influence the Hg concentration in P. erythrocephala blood, muscle and liver, but Hg increased in carapace tissue when length size increased (ANCOVA p = 0.007). In the multiple regression analysis, none of the environmental factors studied had a significant relation with blood, muscle, liver and carapace. P. erythrocephala moves among habitats and in the open and interconnected aquatic systems of the Amazon basin, characterized by high levels of limnological variability, a good bioindicator of Hg concentration needs to be relatively sedentary to represent a specific habitat. However, the levels of Hg in liver were sufficient to pose a potential risk to humans that consume them, suggesting the usefulness of P. erythrocephala as a bioindicator. © 2008 Elsevier B.V.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2008.09.049
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