1. Metal concentrations in fish, crabs, and bivalve molluscs from marine waters adjacent to a multi-metals smelter and refinery.
- Author
-
Bain, Peter A., Gaylard, Sam, Zariff, Razia, Bansemer, Matthew, Pahl, Stephen, and Lewis, Carolyn
- Subjects
MARINE pollution ,COPPER ,MYTILUS edulis ,BLUE crab ,SEAWATER ,ARSENIC - Abstract
Metal concentrations were determined in tissues of finfish, crabs, and bivalve molluscs collected from marine waters near Port Pirie, South Australia, the site of a long-standing multi-metals smelter and refinery. A general trend of tissue metal concentrations in order of highest to lowest was observed in bivalves > crabs > finfish. A lead concentration of 158 ± 6.6 mg/kg (wet wt.) was observed in blue mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) sampled close to the smelter. Lead concentrations correlated positively with proximity to the smelter in all biota analysed. Similar relationships were observed for cadmium, copper, zinc and selenium in all biota except razorfish (Pinna bicolor ; Bivalvia: Pinnidae), which showed no correlation with proximity to the smelter for these metals. Inorganic arsenic concentrations were below the limit of reporting in the majority of the analysed samples, however inorganic arsenic concentrations in blue swimmer crabs (Portunus armatus) and blue mussels correlated with proximity to the smelter. Mercury concentrations in the biota analysed were generally low and showed variable relationships with proximity to the smelter, with no significant correlation observed in finfish and razorfish, a significant positive correlation in blue mussels, and a significant negative correlation in blue swimmer crabs. This is the first major study of metal concentrations in recreationally-targeted marine species near Port Pirie species for more than two decades. Comparison with data from previous studies conducted shows little change in tissue metal concentrations in marine biota near Port Pirie over the past 40 years. [Display omitted] • The marine environment near Port Pirie has been impacted by long-term smelter operations. • Tissue metal concentrations were analysed in recreationally targeted marine species. • Bivalves and crabs contained higher metal concentrations than finfish. • Pb, Cd, Cu, Zn, As, and Se concentrations correlated with proximity to the smelter. • Metal levels in Port Pirie marine biota are relatively unchanged over 40 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF