Litcius/Paper detail

Accumulation of trace metals in crayfish tissues: is <i>Procambarus clarkii</i> a vector of pollutants in Po Delta inland waters?

Michele Mistri, Cristina Munari, Antonella Pagnoni, Tatiana Chenet, Luisa Pasti, Alberto Cavazzini

2020The European Zoological Journal42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Concentrations of trace elements (Cd, Pb, As, Cu and Zn) were determined in superficial sediments and in hepatopancreas, exoskeleton, and abdominal muscle of the red swamp crayfish Procambarus clarkii from several canals of the Po River Delta area. Sediments of the studied canals exhibited some metal pollution. The hepatopancreas of the crayfish showed a higher concentration of trace metals in comparison to the other tissues at all sites under scrutiny. Concentrations of As and Pb, either in sediment and P. clarkii tissues, were probably related to the use of fertilizers and pesticides. Moreover, the levels of certain metals accumulated in the abdominal muscle (Pb, Cu and Zn) exceeded the threshold values considered harmful to human health. The Toxic Contamination Index, depending on the bioaccumulation data of hepatopancreas and abdominal muscle, allowed us to assess the toxicity by heavy metals of sediments measuring the stress level of the detoxification organ, and resulted in &amp;gt;1 only at two sampling canals. We hypothesize that P. clarkii in the Po River Delta aquatic communities can act as a vector of pollutants, as crayfish can transfer their relatively high amount of heavy metals to higher trophic levels.

Topics & Concepts

Procambarus clarkiiHepatopancreasCrayfishEnvironmental chemistryBioaccumulationPollutantTrace metalPollutionChemistryBiologyEcologyMetalOrganic chemistryEnvironmental Toxicology and EcotoxicologyHeavy metals in environmentWater Quality and Pollution Assessment