AI Article Synopsis

  • Contaminants, particularly from rainfall, pose risks to the health of decapods (e.g., shrimp, crabs) that are crucial for fisheries, highlighting concerns for sustainability in these environments.
  • A systematic review analyzed 138 studies, revealing that exposure to metals, PAHs, and pesticides negatively affects decapod physiology, especially in key processes like growth and metabolism.
  • The findings stress the urgent need for regulatory testing of new chemicals to protect harvested species, especially as climate changes could increase contaminant exposure in estuaries.

Article Abstract

Contaminants are transported into estuaries during rainfall events, impacting the physiology of harvested species, and thereby threatening fisheries sustainability. Decapods are among the most economically important groups harvested from estuaries, but are at high risk of contaminant exposure. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis evaluating the physiological responses of harvested estuarine decapods to contaminants and flooding. A total of 138 research articles were identified, with global research efforts corresponding to the geographic distribution of crustacean harvesting. From these studies, 305 acute toxicity values for metals, polcyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and pesticide chemical classes were extracted and 341 sublethal effect sizes (log-response ratios; LnRRs) calculated using 91 physiological measures across seven response categories. At sublethal environmentally relevant concentrations, exposure to various metals, pesticide chemical classes and PAHs consistently elicited negative effects on decapod physiology (LnRR range: -0.67 to -0.07). Key physiological processes impacted by contaminant exposure included nutritional condition, osmoregulation, oxidative stress defences, acetylcholinesterase activity, metabolism and growth (LnRR range: -0.73 to -0.10), with a general trend for greater effects later in ontogeny. With new agricultural and industrial chemicals continually being marketed, our meta-analysis highlights the need for regulatory testing on harvested species prior to registration for use in catchment areas. Under future climatic variability, harvested estuarine decapods may be increasingly exposed to contaminants, with implications for fisheries and global food security.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2024.125347DOI Listing

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