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Stress protein accumulation as an indicator of impact by the
petroleum industry in Todos os Santos Bay, Brazil
I.A. Nascimento*a, M.B.N.
Leitea, G. Sansoneb, S.A. Pereiraa,
D.H. Smitha
aInstitute of Biology, Federal University of
Bahia, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil
bUniversita Degli Studi di Napoli Federico 11,
8-80134 Naples, Italy
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Abstract
The relative concentrations of stress
proteins in juvenile mangrove oysters (Crassostrea rhizophorae),
from six study sites in Todos os Santos Bay, Bahia, Brazil, were
used to evaluate the possibility of chronic environmental impact
induced by 40 years of exposure to the local petroleum industry.
Replicated tissue samples from oysters at four sites associated
with the extraction, transport and refinement of petroleum, and
from two control sites, were used for stress protein (60 kDa) determination.
The relative levels of stress proteins were statistically compared
by standard methods. Friedman nonparametric analysis of variance,
followed by multiple comparisons among samples, revealed significant
differences in stress protein levels. Oysters from sites associated
with the extraction and transport of petroleum had the highest relative
concentrations of stress proteins, while the control areas revealed
minimum concentrations. Samples tom the refinery site, where oyster
populations were severely reduced, did not differ from the control
sites. Comparisons with parallel studies on the toxicity of aquatic
substrates at the same sites revealed that stress protein analyses
were useful in evaluating chronic environmental impact, within the
tolerance limits of C. rhizophorae, but that the stress response
diminished significantly when conditions approached the lethal limits
for this species. The stress protein response appears to serve as
a valid biomonitoring method under chronic, sublethal exposures,
before biological responses become evident at the organismic or
population levels, but may not serve well when the stressor intensity
is at or near the lethal tolerance level. © 1998 Elsevier Science
Ltd and AEHMS. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Petroleum; Chronic impact; Stress proteins;
Crassostrea rhizophorae
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