Revista Ambiente & Água (Apr 2021)

Determination and evaluation of mercury concentration in fish in the São Francisco River Watershed, Brazil

  • Marcos Vinícius Teles Gomes,
  • Carlos Alexandre Borges Garcia,
  • Yoshimi Sato,
  • Érica Araújo Mendes,
  • Mário Olindo Tallarico de Miranda,
  • Silvânio Silvério Lopes da Costa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4136/ambi-agua.2647
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 2
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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The objective of this work was to evaluate the bioaccumulation of mercury in 13 species of fish with different eating habits, captured in the Três Marias Reservoir, São Francisco Basin, from March 2012 to April 2013. The results obtained showed that the species with carnivorous eating habit presented the highest average concentrations of mercury in muscle, especially Serrasalmus brandtii (pirambeba) and Pygocentrus piraya (piranha), with concentrations of 0.4147 ± 0.2744 μg g-1 and 0.17774 ± 0.2980 μg g-1, respectively. Considering the average concentrations, all the species studied showed levels of mercury below the maximum limit of 0.5 μg g-1 in non-predatory fish and 1.0 μg g-1 in predatory fish, established by the Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária. Taking each species into account, the minimum and maximum values of mercury in the muscular and hepatic tissues showed a wide dispersion. In 4% of the specimens of pirambeba and 7% of piranha, the contents of mercury in muscle exceeded the limit established by ANVISA for predatory fish, and therefore, were unfit for human consumption. The other species did not present muscle samples with Hg content above that established by law. Due to its carnivorous eating habit and its wide distribution in the São Francisco Basin, Serrasalmus brandtii can be considered a biomonitor, capable of bioaccumulating mercury, thus indicating the level of contamination in the aquatic environment in which it lives.

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