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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Mangrove ecosystems are adversely affected by anthropogenic activities despite their great socioeconomic and environmental importance. Benthic infaunal community studies, and more specifically Polychaeta species, are a useful tool to determine the health of an ecosystem. In this study, an unbalanced ACI (After Control/Impact) design was used to compare the infaunal community structure in contaminated peri-urban mangrove swamps with nearby pristine mangroves of similar ecological traits in Kenya and Mozambique. This work, as a baseline study, found differences in Polychaeta community between peri-urban and rural, less human-impacted, mangroves in both countries. At the Kenyan study sites, it is possible to state that peri-urban mangroves suffer a larger and more severe human impact leading to a decrease of diversity and a shift to more opportunistic polychaete species. In contrast, at the Mozambican sites it seems that the peri-urban system, contaminated with domestic sewage, leads to higher Polychaeta diversity, when compared with local control sites, probably by making available more organic matter in the foodweb. Among the polychaete community found in this study, the best tolerant families of environmental disturbance are Nereididae and Capitellidae, with Dendronereides zululandica, Perinereis vancaurica and Mediomastus sp. as main representatives.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Polychaeta ; Diversity ; Sewage ; Mangroves
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution , Not Known
    Format: pp.1-14
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  • 2
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-12-21
    Description: Marine biotoxins may pose a threat to the human consumption of seafood and seafood products. The increasing global trade and higher demand for seafood products worldwide represents a challenge for food safety authorities, policy makers, food business operators, and the scientific community, in particular, researchers devoted to environmental sciences, toxicology, and analytical chemistry. In addition, due to changes in climate conditions and technological developments, new and emerging marine toxins are being detected in regions where they were previously unknown. This Special Issue highlight studies aiming to the develop detection methods for marine biotoxins for better understanding the dynamics of accumulation/elimination of marine biotoxins and their effects on marine organisms, as well as toxin exposure studies that aim to evaluate the risks associated with the consumption of contaminated seafood.
    Keywords: R5-920 ; RA1190-1270 ; mass mortality ; marine biotoxin ; n/a ; alamethicin ; synergy ; seafood toxin ; patulin ; Paralytic shellfish toxin ; greater blue-ringed octopus ; Alexandrium catenella ; paralytic toxicity ; Ishigaki Island ; depuration ; okadaic acid ; serum biomarker ; ecotoxicological responses ; Hapalochlaena lunulata ; sydowinin A ; purification ; PSP outbreak ; southern Chile ; posterior salivary gland ; saxitoxin ; harmful algal blooms ; gliotoxin ; seafood safety ; uptake ; immunoaffinity column ; Alexandrium ; sydowinol ; chronic exposure ; environmental neurotoxin ; assimilation ; shellfish ; LC-MS ; biotransformation ; Perna viridis ; domoic acid ; fish ; algal toxin ; warming ; tetrodotoxin ; Mesodesma donacium ; combination index ; ultrahigh high performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry ; bic Book Industry Communication::M Medicine
    Language: English
    Format: application/octet-stream
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