AI Article Synopsis

  • Fish serve as bioindicators for trace metals like iron (Fe), zinc (Zn), lead (Pb), nickel (Ni), and cadmium (Cd) in aquatic ecosystems, with analyses showing Fe and Zn levels within food safety guidelines.
  • Heavy metal accumulation varies by fish habitat, with different ranking orders found in marine and freshwater species, and multivariate analysis helped assess risks and categorize species based on life cycle and environmental factors.
  • The study indicates that while fish species generally meet international safety standards, fishermen face greater cancer risks than other seafood consumers due to higher exposure to these trace metals.

Article Abstract

Fish as seafood is a bioindicator for chemical substances like trace metals in the water systems that accumulate in fish bodies. Fe and Zn as essential and Pb, Ni, and Cd as heavy metals were quantitatively analyzed in fish muscle samples by an atomic absorption spectrophotometer (Perkin Elmer, Model AAnalyst-700). Fe and Zn's results agreed with the food quality guidelines. Fe was the highest in the range of 2.6-9.4 in mg kg. The Zn content indicates the contribution of anthropogenic agents through the food chain. Ni > Pb > Cd was found in marine fish species and Pb > Ni > Cd in freshwater fish. The results have been explored for source appraisal of bioaccumulated trace metals and categorized selected marine and freshwater species based on characteristics (like life cycle and habitats) by applying multivariate principal component analysis to risk assessment parameters. The Pearson correlation coefficients were applied to the risk assessment parameters for interdependencies of metals. Interestingly, synchronized outcomes were obtained with trace metal data. The study results were interpreted in the context of the fish type, habitat, surroundings, feed, life cycle, etc. The living habitats strongly affect trace metal accumulation, target hazard quotient (THQ), and target cancer risk (TR) attributes. The fishermen's community was at higher risk for carcinogenic effects than other seafood consumers. Overall, determinations for fish species were under safe limits as described by international regulatory bodies (FAO, WHO, ANHMRC, WAA).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12011-023-03949-wDOI Listing

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