Marine Invertebrates as Bioindicators of Heavy Metal Pollution
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Date
2014-12Author
Chiarelli, Roberto
Roccheri, Maria Carmela
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Show full item recordAbstract
Atmosphere, earth and water compose the environment. The presence of heavy metals in the environment
has grown because of their large employment in some industrial and agricultural activities.
Although these metals are terrestrial products, they flow into the sea through effluents and
sewage or are directly discharged from industries placed on the seawater front. It should be considered
that metals concentrations vary widely according to different seawater latitudes and
depths and can be strongly influenced by fresh water discharges from heavily polluted rivers. In
this review recent studies on heavy metal pollution in marine ecosystems and their organisms will
be presented. Metal speciation, bioaccumulation in biota, as well as abiotic and biotic factors affecting
their bioavailability will be reviewed. Moreover, the use of bioindicator organisms for the
biomonitoring of heavy metal toxicity and their ecological effects will be defined. Many marine
invertebrate species fulfill the following criteria: Sensitivity to a wide range of chemicals (especially
to heavy metals), cost-effectiveness for repeatable tests, readily interpretable biological consequences
of pollution. Among the most important marine invertebrates used as bioindicators, the
sea urchin embryo is one of the most suitable, especially to assess metal/heavy metal pollution.
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- Chemistry [106]