Cypermethrin is a pyrethroid pesticide widely used to combat agricultural pests. However, little information is available about its toxicity in aquatic macroinvertebrates in the context of the Moroccan coastline. In this study, a suite of physiological and behavioral biomarkers for water quality surveillance using mussels are used to characterize the toxicity of Cypermethrin. In these tests, sublethal effects on valve activity behavior, byssal thread formation, and survival in air of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis were assessed in short-term exposure. The results show that Cypermethrin impaired the valve activity in a concentration-dependent manner, leading to a reduction in the time of normal opening. The lowest effect concentration was determined as 100 μg/l Cypermethrin. Prolonged closures of mussels were also observed for the exposures to 400 and 800 μg/l. The delay to the first detection of the pesticide was concentration dependent. The capacity to produce new byssus threads in a Cypermethrin exposure was inhibited at all concentrations and especially at high concentrations. Survival in air was not affected even at 800 μg/l Cypermethrin.
Several researches have been conducted to explain patterns of the abundance, richness and taxonomic diversity of benthic polychaetes; however, such analyses have ignored the functional diversity of polychaete communities, especially feeding guilds in intertidal rocky shores. The present study was carried out to describe and analyse the polychaete feeding guilds on intertidal rocky shores and then examine the effects of environmental factors. Twelve intertidal rocky shores from the coastal protected area of Essaouira (Atlantic coast of Morocco) were sampled during the summer of 2016. A total of 42 polychaete species belonging to 29 genera and 16 families were identified among the 4517 specimens collected. The medium biomass per sampling site was found to be 37.61 ± 15.80 g.m -2 . The polychaete species were classified into five feeding guilds, and nine feeding modes. The filter feeders were the dominant feeding guild (32%) followed by omnivores (23%), burrowers (20%), carnivorous (15%) and surface deposit-feeders (10%). The FDT (filter feeder, discretely motile, with tentacles) was the most abundant feeding mode, accounting for 24% of abundance (mainly represented by Sabellaria alveolata), followed by the ODJ feeding mode (omnivorous, discretely motile, with jaw apparatus) with 22%, and the SDT feeding mode (surface deposit feeder, discretely motile, with tentacles) with 18.9%. The highest trophic importance index and index of trophic diversity values were recorded in the southern region of Essaouira coastline. Based on the canonical correspondence analysis, composition and spatial distribution of polychaete feeding guilds were mainly related to the length of rocky shores and water temperature.
Valve activity was measured in the Mediterranean mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis in response to sublethal concentrations of four metals (Hg, Cu, Zn and Cd) and two phosphate industry effluents from the Atlantic coast of Morocco. Valve movements were monitored using a proximity inductive sensor which could display all activity figures from full closure to wide opening of the shell valves. In a 1 h exposure experiments, all metals induced a decrease in the time of normal opening and the appearance of sequences of stress behaviour, including enhanced valve adductions and complete closure at high concentrations. Mercury (tested from 5 to 75 microg Hg l(-1)) was the most toxic to the valve activity, with a threshold effective concentration at 10 microg Hg l(-1) and full valve closure occurring at 50 microg Hg l(-1). Copper (15-150 microg Cu l(-1)) showed a toxic effect starting at threshold concentration of 20 microg Cu l(-1) and induced full valve closure at 150 microg Cu l(-1). Zinc (100-500 microg Zn l(-1)) was effective in reducing the time of normal opening (threshold concentration at 100 microg Zn I(-1)) but no complete closure was recorded in any of the tested concentrations. For cadmium (1000-5000 microg Cd l(-1)), the valve activity was insensitive for exposures under 2000 microg Cd l(-1). Results for the testing of several samplings of the phosphate industry effluents (Safi and Jorf Lasfar) showed that their toxicity varied over the time. The effluent of the Jorf Lasfar plant (2-9.4%) was, however, more toxic than that of Safi (1-25%). In the light of these results, the sensitivity of the valve activity of Mytilus galloprovincialis to pollutants and its usefulness for in situ monitoring of coastal pollution in Morocco are discussed.
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