Abstract

Abstract Adult specimens of the muricid gastropod Hexaplex trunculus were collected from their natural habitat: the Lake Club station located in the North Tunis Lake, a sampling site characterized by the absence of shipping activity and an imposex incidence of 12.9%. These specimens were transplanted to a sampling site with intense shipping traffic: the Bizerta channel, where a preliminary survey detected an imposex incidence of 100%. The transplanted specimens were tagged prior to release and periodical recaptures were made every 60 days during a study period of 8 months (from July 2004 to March 2005) in order to compare the imposex development between both sampling sites. After 5 months of exposure in the Bizerta channel, all transplanted females were affected by imposex (with the development of an incomplete male genital tract). Microscopic examinations showed that imposex begun by the development of a small portion of vas deferens located halfway between the expected position of the future penis and the vagina. The imposex indices used in this study were the imposex frequency (I (%)), the vas deferens sequence index (VDSI), the relative penis length index (RPL), the average female penis length index (FPL) and the average female vas deferens length (VDL). All these indices increased in the transplanted population as compared to the population from the original sampling site, but VDSI and VDL were considered the best indices to assess the environmental pollution by tributyltin (TBT) and its deleterious effects in H. trunculus.

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