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Domestic sewage is an important source of pollutants in aquatic ecosystems and includes both microplastics (MPs) and pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs). This study sought to assess the biological effects of the interaction between plastic particles and the antibacterial agent triclosan (TCS). The study relied on the swamp ghost crab Ucides cordatus as a model. Herein polyethylene particles were contaminated with triclosan solution. Triclosan concentrations in the particles were then chemically analyzed. Swamp ghost crab specimens were exposed to experimental compounds (a control, microplastics, and microplastics with triclosan) for 7 days. Samplings were performed on days 3 (T3) and 7 (T7). Gill, hepatopancreas, muscle and hemolymph tissue samples were collected from the animals to evaluate the biomarkers ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase (EROD), dibenzylfluorescein dealkylase (DBF), glutathione S-transferase (GST), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), reduced glutathione (GSH), lipid peroxidation (LPO), DNA strands break (DNA damage), cholinesterase (ChE) through protein levels and neutral red retention time (NRRT). Water, organism, and microplastic samples were collected at the end of the assay for post-exposure chemical analyses. Triclosan was detected in the water and crab tissue samples, results which indicate that microplastics serve as triclosan carriers. Effects on the gills of organisms exposed to triclosan-spiked microplastics were observed as altered biomarker results (EROD, GST, GPx, GSH, LPO, DNA damage and NRRT). The effects were more closely associated with microplastic contaminated with triclosan exposure than with microplastic exposure, since animals exposed only to microplastics did not experience significant effects. Our results show that microplastics may be important carriers of substances of emerging interest in marine environments in that they contaminate environmental matrices and have adverse effects on organisms exposed to these stressors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.135169 | DOI Listing |
Forested, freshwater tidal wetlands in the southeastern US are dominated by bald cypresses (), which tolerate low levels of salinity. However, the response of old-growth bald cypress trees to prolonged increases in salinity remains uncertain. Bald cypress ghost forests occur along Smith Creek, a tributary of the Cape Fear River, North Carolina which has been dredged multiple times since 1871.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Microbiol
June 2024
Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, 27695, USA.
Standing dead trees (snags) are recognized for their influence on methane (CH) cycling in coastal wetlands, yet the biogeochemical processes that control the magnitude and direction of fluxes across the snag-atmosphere interface are not fully elucidated. Herein, we analyzed microbial communities and fluxes at one height from ten snags in a ghost forest wetland. Snag-atmosphere CH fluxes were highly variable (- 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2024
Department of Marine Sciences, Federal University of São Paulo, Baixada Santista Campus, 168 Maria Máximo Street, 11030-100 Santos, São Paulo, Brazil; Santa Cecília University: Post Graduate Program in Environmental Science and Technology, 277 Oswaldo Cruz Street, 11045-907 Boqueirão, Santos, S
Metallurgical activities are a significant source of settleable atmospheric particulate matter (SePM). The material is exposed to wind action, leading to its deposition throughout terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, thus promoting contamination by metals and metalloids. However, knowledge of the impacts on biota is scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
January 2024
Virginia Institute of Marine Science, William & Mary, Gloucester Point, Virginia, USA.
Ghost forests consisting of dead trees adjacent to marshes are striking indicators of climate change, and marsh migration into retreating coastal forests is a primary mechanism for marsh survival in the face of global sea-level rise. Models of coastal transgression typically assume inundation of a static topography and instantaneous conversion of forest to marsh with rising seas. In contrast, here we use four decades of satellite observations to show that many low-elevation forests along the US mid-Atlantic coast have survived despite undergoing relative sea-level rise rates (RSLRR) that are among the fastest on Earth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemosphere
December 2022
Biogeochemistry and Environmental Quality Research Group, Clemson University, Georgetown, SC, 29442, USA.
Wetlands are widely regarded as biogeochemical hotspots of highly toxic methylmercury (MeHg), mainly mediated by sulfate-reducing bacteria. In low-lying coastal wetlands, sea level rise, a phenomenon caused by global climate change, is slowly degrading numerous healthy freshwater forested wetlands into salt-degraded counterparts with a nickname "ghost forests", and eventually converting them to saltmarshes. However, little is known about the changes of mercury (Hg) methylation, bioaccumulation, and biomagnification along the forest-to-saltmarsh gradient.
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