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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Transitional waterbodies, such as estuaries, are
highly diversified environments with respect to ecology,
geophysics, and nature of anthropogenic impacts. This spatial
heterogeneity may pose important constraints when developing
monitoring programmes for aquatic pollution. The
present study compared three distinct coastal ecosystems
located in Southern Portugal (subjected to different anthropogenic
stressors), namely, two estuaries and a coastal lagoon,
through the characterisation of sediment contamination and a
biomarker approach to an important commercial clam (Ruditapes
decussatus) obtained from local fishing grounds. The
results showed high heterogeneity of sediment contamination
for both estuaries and a marked distinction between industrially
and agriculturally influenced areas as well as between
natural and artificialized sites. Hydrodynamics and oceanic
influence (in essence dictating sediment type) play a major
role in environmental quality. Environmental heterogeneity
constituted an important confounding factor for biomarker
analysis in the clams’ digestive glands since the animals
appeared to respond to their immediate surroundings’ characteristics
rather than the geographical area where they were
collected from, despite the relative distance to pollution hot
spots. Still, oxidative stress biomarkers (lipid peroxidation
and catalase activity) could correlate with each other and to
both organic and metallic contamination, whereas metallothionein-
like protein induction failed to correlate to any class
of sediment toxicants (albeit metals being the most representative
pollutants) and appeared to be strongly affected
(unlike the previous) by clam size and probably other
unknown internal and external variables, among which contaminant
interactions should play a major role.
Description
Keywords
Ecotoxicology Biomarkers Contaminants Estuaries Sediments Clams