4.7 Article

Does trophic level drive organic and metallic contamination in coral reef organisms?

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 667, Issue -, Pages 208-221

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.02.311

Keywords

Nitrogen stable isotope; PCBs; Pesticides; Trace elements; Bioreduction; Biomagnification; Serranidae

Funding

  1. LabEx CORAIL, France (project COREPAC)
  2. GOPS (project FOTROCO)
  3. CPER (Contrat de Projet Etat-Region)
  4. FEDER (European Regional Development Fund)
  5. IUF, France (Institut Universitaire de France)

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Metallic and organic pollutants constitute a serious threat for coral reef ecosystems, potentially affecting a great number of species interacting within complex trophodynamic processes. Pesticides, PCBs and trace elements were measured on coral reef communities of three Pacific islands (Moorea. Wallis and New Caledonia) in relation with delta N-15 values, a proxy of trophic level. Several potential sources of organic matter, benthic invertebrates and fish belonging to various trophic strategies were sampled at each island. Wallis and New Caledonia displayed, respectively, the highest concentrations of pesticides and trace elements. In the three islands, most trace element concentrations (Cd, Co. Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb. and V) decreased when delta N-15 was rising (i.e. bioreduction), whereas Hg and Se biomagnified with increasing delta N-15 values. Only few trace elements in some islands did not show any significant trend in relation with ON (i.e., Ag in New Caledonia, Zn in Wallis and As plus Zn in Moorea). PCBs concentrations showed a significant bioreduction in New Caledonia and in Moorea, but a significant biomagnification in Wallis. Aldrin and heptachlor were the only pesticides to show a similar significant bioreduction in the three islands. Other pesticides, such as chlordecone, diazinon, endosulfan I and II, heptachlor-epoxide A and B, lindane and pp'-DDE displayed contrasted patterns (e.g. chlordecone significantly biomagnified in New Caledonia, significantly bioreduced in Wallis and did not displayed any significant trend in Moorea). Finally, for unclear reasons, Moorea displayed only negative significant correlations between delta N-15 and all pesticides (except pp'-DDT). Our results highlight that trophic level, here assessed through delta N-15 values, is a good predictor of metallic trace elements biomagnification or bioreduction in coral reef organisms. However, at large spatial scale, trophic level relevance to predict pesticides and PCBs biomagnification or bioreduction should be considered with caution and studied in dose relation with local characteristics. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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