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Trace metals in seawater and copepods in the ocean outfall area off the northern Taiwan coast. | LitMetric

Trace metals in seawater and copepods in the ocean outfall area off the northern Taiwan coast.

Mar Environ Res

Department of Marine Environmental Informatics, National Taiwan Ocean University, Keelung 20224, Taiwan, ROC.

Published: March 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed trace metal distribution in seawater and copepods off the northern coast of Taiwan, finding significant contamination by metals like dissolved Fe and Zn.
  • The research indicated that most trace metals were primarily in particulate form, emphasizing the importance of analyzing solid phases over dissolved ones for evaluating metal contamination.
  • Copepods in the outfall area showed elevated concentrations of various trace metals compared to background levels, suggesting they could be used as indicators of environmental contamination.

Article Abstract

The distribution, partitioning and concentrations of trace metals (Cd, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb and Zn) in seawater, including dissolved and particulate phases, and in copepods in the ocean outfall area off the northern coast of Taiwan were investigated. Normalization of metal concentrations to the background metal concentration to yield relative enrichment factors (EF), which were used to evaluate the contamination of dissolved and particulate trace metals in seawater around the ocean outfall. The EF results indicated that the outfall area was significantly contaminated by dissolved Fe and Zn, and by particulate Fe, Cr, Cu, Pb and Zn. In addition, most trace metals were chiefly in the particulate phase. The average percentage of total metal concentrations (dissolved plus particulate phases) bound by suspended particulate matter followed the sequence Al(95%) = Mn(95%) > Pb(88%) > Cu(86%) > Fe(72%) > Zn(32%) > Cr(17.5%) > Cd(3.4%). Therefore, metal contamination is better evaluated in solid phase than in the dissolved phase. The concentration ranges of trace metals in the copepods, Temora turbinata, Oncaea venusta and Euchaeta rimana, near the outfall were: Cd, 0.23-1.81 microg g(-1); Cr, 16.5-195 microg g(-1); Cu, 14-160 microg g(-1); Fe, 256-7255 microg g(-1); Mn, 5.5-80.8 microg g(-1); Pb, 2.6-56.2 microg g(-1); Zn, 132-3891 microg g(-1); and Al, 0.21-1.13%. Aluminum, and probably Fe, seemed to be the major elements in copepods. The concentrations of trace metals in copepods, especially Temora turbinata, near the outfall were generally higher than those obtained in the background station. The mean increase in bioconcentration factor of metals in copepods ranged from 4 to 7 and followed the sequence Al(6.4) > Cu(6.2) > Fe(6.0) > Zn(5.7) > Pb(5.6) > Cr(5.5) > Cd(5.1) > Mn(4.7). Therefore, marine copepods in the waters of northern Taiwan can accumulate trace metals over background concentrations and act as contamination indicators.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2005.10.002DOI Listing

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