4.7 Article

Assessment of ecosystem health disturbance in mangrove-lined Caribbean coastal systems using the oyster Crassostrea rhizophorae as sentinel species

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 618, Issue -, Pages 718-735

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.08.098

Keywords

Mangrove cupped oyster; Biomarkers; Condition; Reproduction; Histopathology; Ecosystem health; Biomonitoring

Funding

  1. Spanish Agency for International Development Cooperation (CARIBIOPOL-AECID) [11-CAP2-1595]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Finance [BMW-CTM2012-40203-C02-01]
  3. University of the Basque Country UPV/EHU [UFI 11/37]
  4. Basque Government through Consolidated Research Groups fellowship [IT810-B]

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This investigation was aimed at contributing to develop a suitable multi-biomarker approach for pollution monitoring in mangrove-lined Caribbean coastal systems using as sentinel species, the mangrove cupped oyster, Crassostrea rhizophorae. A pilot field study was carried out in 8 localities (3 in Nicaragua; 5 in Colombia), characterized by different environmental conditions and subjected to different levels and types of pollution. Samples were collected in the rainy and dry seasons of 2012-2013. The biological effects at different levels of biological complexity (Stress-on-Stress response, reproduction, condition index, tissue-level biomarkers and histopathology) were determined as indicators of health disturbance, integrated as IBR/n index, and compared with tissue burdens of contaminants in order to achieve an integrative biomonitoring approach. Though modulated by natural variables and confounding factors, different indicators of oyster health, alone and in combination, were related to the presence of different profiles and levels of contaminants present at low-to-moderate levels. Different mixtures of persistent (As, Cd, PAHs) and emerging chemical pollutants (musk fragrances), in combination with different levels of organic and particulate matter resulting from seasonal oceanographic variability and sewage discharges, and environmental factors (salinity, temperature) elicited a different degree of disturbance in ecosystem health condition, as reflected in sentinel C. rhizophorae. As a result, IBR/nwas correlated with pollution indices, even though the levels of biological indicators of health disturbance and pollutants were low-to-moderate, and seasonality and the incidence of confounding factors were remarkable. Our study supports the use of simple methodological approaches to diagnose anomalies in the health status of oysters from different localities and to identify potential causing agents and reflect disturbances in ecosystem health. Consequently, the easy methodological approach used herein is useful for the assessment of health disturbance in a variety of mangrove-lined Caribbean coastal systems using mangrove cupped oysters as sentinel species. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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