Physiological assessment of fish health in mineral-rich areas of Ganjam, Odisha, India, and chronic toxicity of zirconium oxychloride on the fishes of Channa punctata.

Autor: Mishra, Chirasmita, Mahapatra, Cuckoo
Předmět:
Zdroj: Environmental Monitoring & Assessment; Oct2021, Vol. 193 Issue 10, p1-12, 12p
Abstrakt: The high concentration of metal toxicants in aquatic ecosystems has a detrimental impact on fish health that ultimately jeopardizes human health. Such threats mostly arise in mineral-rich areas where an increase in metal concentrations occurs in aquatic bodies due to anthropogenic activities like mining. The present study assessed the health of food fish Channa punctata from the mineral-rich areas of Ganjam, Odisha, India, mined for heavy and transition metal ores like ilmenite, zircon, monazite. The fishes collected from these areas showed histopathological anomalies in vital organs like the liver, kidney, gills, stomach and intestine while cytological analysis revealed vacuolated cytoplasm and micronuclei. Biochemical analysis showed a significantly lower lipid concentration in muscle (i.e., 0.177 ± 0.177 mg/gm) and liver (i.e., 0.169 ± 0.002 mg/gm) as compared to non-exposed fishes from adjoining non-mineral rich areas having a mean protein concentration of 87.48 ± 8.16 and 77.75 ± 0.892 mg/gm tissue in the muscle and liver, respectively, and a mean lipid concentration of 0.29 ± 0.009 mg/gm muscle and 0.34 ± 0.009 mg/gm liver. Chronic exposure to sublethal concentrations of zirconium oxychloride, a salt of zirconium, resulted in a significant decline in the concentration of protein, ranging from 57.5 ± 0.929 − 63.88 ± 1.95 mg/gm in muscle and 45.35 ± 2.332 − 51.98 ± 1.036 mg/gm in the liver. The lipid concentrations in muscle (0.03 ± 0.009 − 0.17 ± 0.009 mg/gm) and liver (0.06 ± 0.012 − 0.19 ± 0.007 mg/gm) were also significantly lower than the non-exposed fishes. Marked degenerative changes were identified in the histological sections of the gill, intestine, stomach, liver and kidney of zirconium oxychloride–treated fishes along with various nuclear deformities and micronucleus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index