Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/134796
Title: Sewage Pipe Waters Affect Colour Composition in Palaemon Shrimp from the Intertidal in the Canary Islands: A New Non-lethal Bioindicator of Anthropogenic Pollution
Authors: Lozano Bilbao, Enrique 
Alcázar Treviño, Jesús
UNESCO Clasification: 240119 Zoología marina
310509 Influencia del hábitat
240111 Patología animal
Keywords: Bioindicator
Colourimetry
Intertidal
Pollution
Rockpool shrimp, et al
Issue Date: 2023
Journal: Diversity 
Abstract: Marine pollution through anthropic outfalls like sewage pipes is a growing concern since point-source pollution can affect many organisms. Investigating pollutant concentrations in organisms usually requires sacrificing the organisms, but here we propose a new method to infer anthropic pollution in the intertidal by measuring colour levels in Palaemon elegans rockpool shrimp. We took pictures of live shrimp from pools near sewage pipes and control zones in three of the Canary Islands (Gran Canaria, Lanzarote and Tenerife), and measured their RGB (red, green and blue) abdominal colour composition. We then statistically compared colours from the control zone and sewage pipe and between islands. We found a clear differentiation in colour composition between the control zone and areas with a sewage pipe. Our results supported the hypothesis that pollution affects colouration in these invertebrates. We, therefore, suggest the use of darker colourations in P. elegans as a bioindicator of anthropic pollution, a first sign that should spur more in-depth studies in the affected area. This methodology is pollutant unspecific but non-extractive, so we propose its use as a citizen science tool to inform scientists and technicians of possible illegal and/or untreated wastewater that could affect intertidal biota.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/134796
ISSN: 1424-2818
DOI: 10.3390/d15050658
Source: Diversity [ISSN 1424-2818], v. 15, n. 5, 658, (Mayo 2023)
Appears in Collections:Artículos
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