AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to analyze the health of Holochilus chacarius, a small mammal, in a rice agroecosystem in the Pantanal region of Brazil using histopathology.
  • Lung, kidney, skin, liver, and reproductive system tissues were examined from 33 animals, revealing inflammation and damage, particularly in the lungs due to environmental factors like wildfires and heavy metals.
  • The research established a new matrix for classifying tissue damage and highlighted the potential of these small mammals as bioindicators for assessing environmental health.

Article Abstract

Small mammals have a short lifetime and are strictly associated with their environment. This work aimed to use histopathology to assess the health of Holochilus chacarius in a rice agroecosystem in the Pantanal of Mato Grosso do Sul. During necropsy, fragments of the lung, kidney, skin, liver, and reproductive system of 33 animals were collected and submitted to histological processing. Tissue damages were evaluated as mild, moderate, and severe and arranged in a matrix for further statistical analysis. Furthermore, we used generalized linear models to verify the influence of tissue changes on the body condition, obtained by a regression between body mass and length. In the lungs, we found an intense inflammatory infiltrate associated with anthracosis that had a negative influence on the body's condition. Also, we observed degenerative and inflammatory changes in the liver, kidneys, skin, and reproductive system that ranged from mild to moderate. The histopathological lesions observed in this study may be associated with environmental alterations of anthropic origin such as the exposure to soot from wildfires and heavy metals, evidenced by lesions in the lung, kidney, and liver. The present study provided a histopathological matrix as a new approach that allows to classify and quantify the tissue alterations. Tissue changes when associated with body condition demonstrated to be an effective tool to assess the health of small free-living mammals, showing that these animals can be used as bioindicators of environmental condition.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-024-12566-6DOI Listing

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