The goby fish Sicydium spp. as valuable sentinel species towards the chemical stress in freshwater bodies of West Indies

TitleThe goby fish Sicydium spp. as valuable sentinel species towards the chemical stress in freshwater bodies of West Indies
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsBony, S, Labeille, M, Lefrancois, E, Noury, P, Olivier, JM, Santos, R, Teichert, N, Besnard, A, Devaux, A
JournalAquatic Toxicology
Volume261
Pagination106623
Date PublishedJan-08-2023
ISSN0166445X
Abstract

Implementation of the European Water Framework Directive in tropical areas such as the French West Indies (FWI) requires to select relevant aquatic sentinel species for investigating the ecological status of surface waters. The present work aimed to study the biological response of the widespread fish Sicydium spp. towards river chemical quality in Guadeloupe island through a set of proper biomarkers. During a 2-year survey, the hepatic EROD activity, the micronucleus formation and the level of primary DNA strand breaks in erythrocytes were measured respectively as an enzymatic biomarker of exposure and genotoxicity endpoints in fish living upstream and downstream of two chemically-contrasted rivers. Hepatic EROD activity was shown to be variable along the time but always significantly higher in fish from the most contaminated river (Rivière aux Herbes) compared to the low contaminated one (Grande Rivière de Vieux-Habitants). Fish size did not influence EROD activity. Female fish exhibited a lower EROD activity compared to males depending on the catching period. We observed significant temporal variation in micronucleus frequency and primary DNA damage level measured in fish erythrocytes that did not depend on the fish size. Micronucleus frequency and to a lesser extent DNA damage were significantly higher in fish from the Rivière aux Herbes compared to the Grande Rivière de Vieux-Habitants. Our results argue for the interest of using Sicydium spp. as sentinel species to assess river quality and chemical pressures in FWI.

URLhttps://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0166445X23002266
DOI10.1016/j.aquatox.2023.106623
Short TitleAquatic Toxicology
Catégorie HCERES
ACL - Peer-reviewed articles
Publication coopération et recherche SUD
Oui