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This study examines the potential public health risk due to the massive use of organochlorine pesticides (OCs) in agriculture in the Gulf of California. Specimens of the clam Chione californiensis were collected from three coastal lagoons (Yavaros, Altata and Reforma). Sites were classified as polluted/nonpolluted based on the presence/absence of OCs as an indicator of the persistence of these pollutants; in polluted sites, the time elapsed since pesticide application (past or recent) was estimated. Screening values (SV) for protecting human health as per the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) were used for risk assessment. OCs detected were ranked according to frequency of occurrence as follows: γ-chlordane (75%) > endrin (54%) > aldrin (48%) > heptachlor, and dichlorodiphenyl-trichloroethane (DDE) (37%) > β-heptachlor epoxide (30%) > lindane (α-BHC, δ-BHC) and endosulphan I (≤ 6%). Specifically, OCs detected at the highest concentration were heptachlor in Yavaros (0.0168 µgg(-1)) and Altata (0.0046 µgg(-1)), and aldrin in Reforma (0.0019 µgg(-1)). β-Heptachlor epoxide in Altata and Reforma was the only OC with a concentration exceeding the EPA Screening Value. From our results and based on the monthly consumption limit set forth by EPA, the maximum safe consumption of clams to avoid a carcinogenic risk derived from β-heptachlor epoxide in the fishing villages of Yavaros and Altata is 4 servings per month (1 serving = 0.227 kg) by a 70-kg person. These findings suggest that concentrations of OCs and their isomers in C. californiensis populations reflect environmental persistence as well as recent inputs of OCs into coastal lagoons in the Gulf of California.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03601234.2016.1159455 | DOI Listing |
J Fish Biol
September 2025
Department of Zoology, Faculty of Natural Sciences & Oceanography, Universidad de Concepción, Concepción, Chile.
Mar Environ Res
August 2025
Institute for Coastal and Marine Research, Nelson Mandela University, Gqeberha, Eastern Cape, 6031, Republic of South Africa; Department of Zoology and Entomology, Rhodes University, Makhanda, Eastern Cape, 6140, Republic of South Africa; Department of Zoology & Conservation Research Institute, Univ
Two permanently-open inlets, Knysna estuarine bay and Keurbooms Lagoon, and the only temporarily-open Swartvlei estuary are three adjacent warm-temperate water bodies that differ in their size, morphology and hydrography but which nevertheless all support extensive beds of the endangered seagrass, Nanozostera capensis. To investigate whether their varied environmental conditions influence the compositional structure of the functional guilds of seagrass-associated macrobenthos, the relative abundance and patchiness of the 28 identifiable guilds occurring subtidally along their main channels were examined, including in relation to the spatial patchiness in abundance displayed by their whole macrobenthic assemblages. Two markedly different functional-group structurings were apparent, without intermediate states: one overwhelmingly dominated by local but highly abundant, epifaunal microgastropods (Alaba pinnae, 'Assiminea' capensis and 'Hydrobia' knysnaensis) that feed on leaf-associated periphyton, and the other in which this guild although present was insignificant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCamb Prism Coast Futur
November 2024
Department of Geography, Kiel University, Kiel, Germany.
The capacity of river mouths to reduce storm surge water levels upstream, referred to as along-estuary attenuation, has been assessed by several studies. The coastal protection function of semi-enclosed water bodies such as lagoons and channels with narrow inlets remains less explored and generalization is hampered by differences in morphology and hydrodynamic forcing. Here we use a hydrodynamic model to investigate surge attenuation along a microtidal channel with a narrow inlet at the Baltic Sea coast of Germany called The Schlei.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCamb Prism Coast Futur
April 2025
Department of Geography, School of Natural Sciences, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
With coastal populations rising at three times the global average, sustainable ways of safeguarding human needs around access and use of the coast alongside lasting ecosystem health of coastal environments must be developed. At the same time, human populations are facing the challenge of managing coastal access on the back of a legacy of human interventions that have already altered - and have often had unintended or unforeseen impacts on - the coastal system and its functioning. We chart the history of the evolution of North Bull Island in Dublin Bay as an example of major unforeseen sedimentation in a coastal estuarine bay following the construction of river mouth training walls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2025
Departamento de Conservación de la Biodiversidad, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Av. Centenario km 5.5, 77014 Chetumal, Quintana Roo, Mexico.
Massive influxes of pelagic Sargassum into Caribbean coastal ecosystems have disrupted environmental conditions and reshaped benthic communities. We evaluated how varying levels of Sargassum exposure (2015-2021) influenced the isotopic niche structure of five reef-associated sea urchin species across three reef lagoons in the Mexican Caribbean. Exposure scenarios were classified as Low (2016-2017), High (2015, 2018), and Prolonged (2021) based on satellite-derived biomass and its effect on lagoon reefs over last years.
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