Abstract

Simple SummaryThe environment receives different sources of pollutants, resulting from human industrial pollution as well as activities. This review updates and focuses the light on the relation between the toxicity of heavy metals resulting from bioaccumulation in fish and the parasite bioindication role and its infestation.As a result of the global industrial revolution, contamination of the ecosystem by heavy metals has given rise to one of the most important ecological and organismic problems, particularly human, early developmental stages of fish and animal life. The bioaccumulation of heavy metals in fish tissues can be influenced by several factors, including metal concentration, exposure time, method of metal ingestion and environmental conditions, such as water temperature. Upon recognizing the danger of contamination from heavy metals and the effects on the ecosystem that support life on earth, new ways of monitoring and controlling this pollution, besides the practical ones, had to be found. Diverse living organisms, such as insects, fish, planktons, livestock and bacteria can be used as bioindicators for monitoring the health of the natural ecosystem of the environment. Parasites have attracted intense interest from parasitic ecologists, because of the variety of different ways in which they respond to human activity contamination as prospective indices of environmental quality. Previous studies showed that fish intestinal helminths might consider potential bioindicators for heavy metal contamination in aquatic creatures. In particular, cestodes and acanthocephalans have an increased capacity to accumulate heavy metals, where, for example, metal concentrations in acanthocephalans were several thousand times higher than in host tissues. On the other hand, parasitic infestation in fish could induce significant damage to the physiologic and biochemical processes inside the fish body. It may encourage serious impairment to the physiologic and general health status of fish. Thus, this review aimed to highlight the role of heavy metal accumulation, fish histopathological signs and parasitic infestation in monitoring the ecosystem pollutions and their relationship with each other.

Highlights

  • For the time being, the environment receives different sources of pollutants, resulting from human industrial pollution as well as activities [1,2]

  • Intestinal parasites of fish as acanthocephalans are thorny-headed worms that can accumulate higher concentrations levels of heavy metals than those accumulated in the host tissues [21,22]

  • Tellez and Merchant [86] investigate the exposure of both fish and alligators to parasites and heavy environmental pollution with heavy metals, using the monitoring programs as a useful tool to detect metal concentrations and exposure

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Summary

Introduction

The environment receives different sources of pollutants, resulting from human industrial pollution as well as activities [1,2]. A new approach is chosen to visualize ecosystem health by using some living organisms as bioindicators [14] In this aspect, macrophytes, phytoplankton, invertebrates, and fish are widely used as bioindicators for heavy metals pollution [15,16]. Intestinal parasites of fish as acanthocephalans are thorny-headed worms that can accumulate higher concentrations levels of heavy metals than those accumulated in the host tissues [21,22]. In this aspect, helminths parasites, especially intestinal ones (trematodes, nematodes, cestodes, and acanthocephalans) are used as biological indicators for heavy metal pollution in the aquatic environment [20]. This review aimed at gathering, updating, and shedding light on the relationship between the heavy metal toxicity and bioaccumulation in fish and the parasitic infestation

Bioaccumulation
Histopathology
Parasitic Infestation in Fish
Nematoda
Conclusions and Future Perspectives

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