1. Organochlorine concentrations in aquatic organisms from different trophic levels of the Sundarbans mangrove ecosystem and their implications for human consumption
- Author
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Asunción Borrell, Victoria Tornero, Alex Aguilar, and Dola Bhattacharjee
- Subjects
Aquatic Organisms ,Food Chain ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Organismes aquàtics ,Population ,Biodiversity ,India ,010501 environmental sciences ,Toxicology ,01 natural sciences ,Food chain ,Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated ,Animals ,Humans ,Ecosystem ,Compostos organoclorats ,education ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Apex predator ,Trophic level ,Bangladesh ,education.field_of_study ,Ecology ,General Medicine ,Organochlorine compounds ,Pollution ,Food web ,Aquatic organisms ,Seafood ,Wetlands ,Environmental science ,Mangrove ,Water Pollutants, Chemical - Abstract
The Sundarbans, a highly biodiverse tropical ecosystem stretching across India and Bangladesh, is also the largest mangrove forest in the world. Organochlorine compounds (OCs) have been extensively used for agriculture and sanitary purposes in the region. OCs can accumulate in biological tissues and biomagnify in organisms through food webs, for which reason they reach high concentrations in top predators. Because marine food webs are long and marine predators are extensively used in the region as human food, assessment of potential health-related risks caused by OC pollution is in order. This study is the first to determine the concentration of PCBs in fish and crustaceans from the Sundarbans mangroves, their accumulation trends through the food web, and the potential toxicological risk that their consumption poses to humans. DDT concentrations, which had already been assessed in the region, were also determined. The median concentrations ranged from below detection limits to 176.3 ng g−1 lipid weight for tDDT and 275.9 ng g−1 for PCBs. Overall, these concentrations were lower than those usually observed in other regions of the world, apparently as a result of the interplay of several factors: low environmental organochlorine inputs, the physical and climatic characteristics of an ecosystem dominated by high temperatures in a highly flushed ecosystem that dilutes and rapidly disperses pollutants, and the comparatively short food chain lengths that, similarly to other mangrove ecosystems, characterize the Sundarbans. Organochlorine concentrations were 2-3 orders of magnitude lower than commonly accepted tolerance levels, so their consumption do not pose a sensible risk to the population. However, concentrations of DDT in dry fish from retail markets were higher because this compound is used for pest control during fish processing. Potential risks involved in this practice likely outweigh potential benefits, so it is recommended that this compound is substituted by less hazardous alternatives.
- Published
- 2019