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Metals in Fishes from Yongshu Island, Southern South China Sea: Human Health Risk Assessment

In order to assess the bioaccumulation of metals associated with gender, tissues, and their potential ecological risk, four species of fish were collected from the Yongshu Island in the Southern South China Sea. Metals and stable Pb isotopes in their tissues (muscle, gill, liver, intestine, and ovar...

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Autores principales: Wu, Zhai, Xu, Ye, Cai, Minggang, Cheng, Sha-Yen, Chen, Huorong, Huang, Dongren, Chen, Kai, Lin, Yan, Li, Tianyao, Liu, Mengyang, Deng, Hengxiang, Ni, Minjie, Ke, Hongwei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5672128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29201049
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2458293
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author Wu, Zhai
Xu, Ye
Cai, Minggang
Cheng, Sha-Yen
Chen, Huorong
Huang, Dongren
Chen, Kai
Lin, Yan
Li, Tianyao
Liu, Mengyang
Deng, Hengxiang
Ni, Minjie
Ke, Hongwei
author_facet Wu, Zhai
Xu, Ye
Cai, Minggang
Cheng, Sha-Yen
Chen, Huorong
Huang, Dongren
Chen, Kai
Lin, Yan
Li, Tianyao
Liu, Mengyang
Deng, Hengxiang
Ni, Minjie
Ke, Hongwei
author_sort Wu, Zhai
collection PubMed
description In order to assess the bioaccumulation of metals associated with gender, tissues, and their potential ecological risk, four species of fish were collected from the Yongshu Island in the Southern South China Sea. Metals and stable Pb isotopes in their tissues (muscle, gill, liver, intestine, and ovary) were determined. The concentrations of metals (mg/kg, dry weight) in these species were ND–21.60 (Cd), 1.21–4.87 (Cr), 0.42–22.4 (Cu), 1.01–51.8 (Mn), 0.30–3.28 (Ni), 6.04–1.29 × 10(3) (Zn), 14.89–1.40 × 10(3) (Fe), and 0.22–3.36 (Pb). In general, the liver and intestine absorbed more metals than the other tissues. Metals accumulation can be influenced by gender and feeding behavior and in fact, female fish and dietary exposure are more prone to accumulate metals. In addition, Pb isotopic ratios indicated that all species had significant biological fractionation, which may not make them good tracers for source identification. The metal concentrations of most samples were lower than the national standard values of the FAO (USA), which suggested that human consumption of these species may not cause health risks. However, since the surrounding areas are developing rapidly, the potential environmental risk of metals will intensify and should receive more attention.
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spelling pubmed-56721282017-12-03 Metals in Fishes from Yongshu Island, Southern South China Sea: Human Health Risk Assessment Wu, Zhai Xu, Ye Cai, Minggang Cheng, Sha-Yen Chen, Huorong Huang, Dongren Chen, Kai Lin, Yan Li, Tianyao Liu, Mengyang Deng, Hengxiang Ni, Minjie Ke, Hongwei J Toxicol Research Article In order to assess the bioaccumulation of metals associated with gender, tissues, and their potential ecological risk, four species of fish were collected from the Yongshu Island in the Southern South China Sea. Metals and stable Pb isotopes in their tissues (muscle, gill, liver, intestine, and ovary) were determined. The concentrations of metals (mg/kg, dry weight) in these species were ND–21.60 (Cd), 1.21–4.87 (Cr), 0.42–22.4 (Cu), 1.01–51.8 (Mn), 0.30–3.28 (Ni), 6.04–1.29 × 10(3) (Zn), 14.89–1.40 × 10(3) (Fe), and 0.22–3.36 (Pb). In general, the liver and intestine absorbed more metals than the other tissues. Metals accumulation can be influenced by gender and feeding behavior and in fact, female fish and dietary exposure are more prone to accumulate metals. In addition, Pb isotopic ratios indicated that all species had significant biological fractionation, which may not make them good tracers for source identification. The metal concentrations of most samples were lower than the national standard values of the FAO (USA), which suggested that human consumption of these species may not cause health risks. However, since the surrounding areas are developing rapidly, the potential environmental risk of metals will intensify and should receive more attention. Hindawi 2017 2017-10-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5672128/ /pubmed/29201049 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2458293 Text en Copyright © 2017 Zhai Wu et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wu, Zhai
Xu, Ye
Cai, Minggang
Cheng, Sha-Yen
Chen, Huorong
Huang, Dongren
Chen, Kai
Lin, Yan
Li, Tianyao
Liu, Mengyang
Deng, Hengxiang
Ni, Minjie
Ke, Hongwei
Metals in Fishes from Yongshu Island, Southern South China Sea: Human Health Risk Assessment
title Metals in Fishes from Yongshu Island, Southern South China Sea: Human Health Risk Assessment
title_full Metals in Fishes from Yongshu Island, Southern South China Sea: Human Health Risk Assessment
title_fullStr Metals in Fishes from Yongshu Island, Southern South China Sea: Human Health Risk Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Metals in Fishes from Yongshu Island, Southern South China Sea: Human Health Risk Assessment
title_short Metals in Fishes from Yongshu Island, Southern South China Sea: Human Health Risk Assessment
title_sort metals in fishes from yongshu island, southern south china sea: human health risk assessment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5672128/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29201049
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2458293
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