Orbital - Vol. 10 No. 4 - Special Issue June 2018
FULL PAPERS

Transplant Experiments as a Tool for Evaluating the Suitability of Sessile Organisms as Biomonitor Species in Tropical Coastal Waters: The Case of the Brown Mussel Perna perna (Linnaeus, 1758) in Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil

Renan Thiago Laynes Longo
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Petrus Magnus Amaral Galvão
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Adan dos Santos Lino
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
João Paulo Machado Torres
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Olaf Malm
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Paulo Renato Dorneles
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Published June 28, 2018
Keywords
  • bioavailability,
  • biomonitoring,
  • bivalve,
  • metal,
  • tropical bays
How to Cite
(1)
Longo, R. T. L.; Galvão, P. M. A.; Lino, A. dos S.; Torres, J. P. M.; Malm, O.; Dorneles, P. R. Transplant Experiments As a Tool for Evaluating the Suitability of Sessile Organisms As Biomonitor Species in Tropical Coastal Waters: The Case of the Brown Mussel Perna Perna (Linnaeus, 1758) in Rio De Janeiro State, Brazil. Orbital: Electron. J. Chem. 2018, 10, 279-285.

Abstract

The present study evaluates mercury (Hg) toxicokinetics in Perna perna (L.) mussels from tropical bays through transplantation experiments. The mussels were transplanted from Guanabara Bay (GB) to Ilha Grande Bay (IGB). The experiments were carried out in December 2008 (experiment 1) and June 2009 (experiment 2). Both experiments lasted one month. In the experiment 2, the transplanted animals (77±8 µg.kg-1) showed a significant increase in Hg concentrations and exhibited significantly higher Hg concentrations than the animals that remained in GB (41±4 µg.kg-1). Despite this increase in mercury levels, the transplanted animals have not achieved the Hg concentrations of IGB resident animals (100±11 µg.kg-1). These results suggest that individuals of this species rapidly incorporated Hg in tropical estuaries.

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17807/orbital.v10i4.1069