Publications by authors named "B Mintoff"

Imposex, i.e., the imposition of male sexual characteristics on female neograstropods, has been used worldwide as a bioindicator of pollution by the antifouling agent TBT as well as to assess the related ecological impact.

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Chemical monitoring for butyltins in bulk seawater, surface microlayer and superficial sediments determined that the two main local sources of marine contamination by tributyltin (TBT) compounds in Malta are ship-repairing dockyards and marinas. In bulk seawater, TBT values ranged from below the detection limit of 5 ng Sn l(-1) to 300 ng Sn l(-1); in sediments derived from the most polluted areas, TBT concentrations as high as 1500 ng Sn g(-1) were measured. At TBT levels found in local harbours, several sublethal biological responses are possible and were observed, including a significant reduction in MFO enzyme system activities of fish; digestive cell atrophy in the oyster Ostrea edulis; and induction of imposex in the snail Hexaplex trunculus.

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Tributyltin and its metabolites were determined in environmental samples by gas chromatography using a flame photometric detection method. The analytical method involved the propylation of the organotins and the use of a recovery standard to correct for inefficient recovery. A detection limit of 5 ng Sn l(-1) for seawater, and 5 ng Sn g(-1) for sediments, was obtained when the detector was equipped with an optical filter; however, this concentration limit, which is higher than the environmental quality standard for TBT, could be improved by a factor of 100 on removing the filter.

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