ISSN: 2155-9910

Ciências Marinhas: Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento

Acesso livre

Nosso grupo organiza mais de 3.000 Séries de conferências Eventos todos os anos nos EUA, Europa e outros países. Ásia com o apoio de mais 1.000 Sociedades e publica mais de 700 Acesso aberto Periódicos que contém mais de 50.000 personalidades eminentes, cientistas de renome como membros do conselho editorial.

Periódicos de acesso aberto ganhando mais leitores e citações
700 periódicos e 15 milhões de leitores Cada periódico está obtendo mais de 25.000 leitores

Indexado em
  • Índice de Fonte CAS (CASSI)
  • Índice Copérnico
  • Google Scholar
  • Sherpa Romeu
  • Abra o portão J
  • Genâmica JournalSeek
  • Chaves Acadêmicas
  • PesquisaBíblia
  • Diretório de Periódicos de Ulrich
  • Biblioteca de Periódicos Eletrônicos
  • RefSeek
  • Diretório de indexação de periódicos de pesquisa (DRJI)
  • Universidade Hamdard
  • EBSCO AZ
  • OCLC – WorldCat
  • Acadêmico
  • Catálogo online SWB
  • Biblioteca Virtual de Biologia (vifabio)
  • Publons
Compartilhe esta página

Abstrato

Effects of Cadmium Exposure on Reproduction and Survival of the Planktonic Copepod Centropages ponticus

Ensibi Cherif, Olivier Pringault, Wifek Hannaoui and Mohamed Nejib Daly Yahia

Heavy metal pollution is a growing environmental problem in marine coastal waters; for this reason the monitoring of water pollution needs the availability of test-species able to furnish reliable and cheap results. From this point of view, copepods are important test organisms owing to their wide distribution and for their key-position within the food web. As Centropages ponticus seems to be a promising target-species in ecotoxicology. The present study assesses the toxic effects of cadmium (Cd) on survival and reproductive performance of C. ponticus. A microcosm experiment was carried out for this study. Copepods were exposed to cadmium that ranged in concentration from 0.1 to 200 µg Cd.L-1 and effects were examined after 24 hours. The results show that treatments with cadmium significantly affect survival in copepods at concentration equal or above 0.2 μg.L−1. In order to assess sublethal effects of cadmium on reproduction; the test organisms were exposed to four nominal Cd concentrations 0, 0.2, 0.4, 1 µg.L-1. The results indicated that egg production decreased with the increase of metal concentration. An increase of the Cd concentration reduced the number of hatched nauplii. Thus, survival and reproduction in C. ponticus as a model test species could be effective physiological markers to monitor marine metal pollution.