Bioaccumulation of Heavy Metals in Water, Sediments, and Tissues and Their Histopathological Effects on Anodonta cygnea (Linea, 1876) in Kabul River, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan

Muhammad Khan, Muhammad Khisroon, Ajmal Khan, Naila Gulfam, Muhammad Siraj, Farrah Zaidi, Ahmadullah, Abidullah, Syeda Hira Fatima, Shumaila Noreen, Hamidullah, Zafar Ali Shah, Fazli Qadir

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Abstract

The present investigation aimed to assess the concentrations of selected heavy metals in water and sediments and their bioaccumulation in tissues of freshwater mussels and their histopathological effects on the digestive gland, gills, and gonads of Anodonta cygnea. Water, sediments, and freshwater mussel samples were collected at four sites, that is, reference and polluted sites,along the Kabul River, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The polluted sites were receiving effluents from the industrial, agricultural, municipal,and domestic sources. The order of metals in the water was Zn > Pb > Ni > Cu > Mn > Fe > Cr > Cd, in sediments the order was Fe > Zn > Cr > Ni > Mn > Pb > Cu > Cd, and in the soft tissues the order was Fe > Zn > Mn > Pb > Cu > Cr > Ni > Cd. Histopathological alterations observed in polluted sites of Kabul River were inflammation, hydropic vacuolation, and lipofuscin pigments (in digestive gland), gill lamellar fusion, dilated hemolymphatic sinus, clumping, and generation of cilia and hemocytic infiltration (in gills), and atresia, necrosis, granulocytoma, hemocytic infiltration, and lipofuscin pigments (in gonads). The histopathological alterations in the organs of Anodonta cygnea can be considered as reliable biomarkers in biomonitoring of heavy metal pollution in aquatic ecosystems.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1910274
Number of pages11
JournalBioMed Research International
Volume2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Mar 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • heavy metals
  • bioaccumulation
  • water
  • sediments
  • freshwater mussel
  • Anodonta cygnea
  • Kabul River
  • histopathologic
  • biomarkers

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