Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira
University of São Paulo
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Publication
Featured researches published by Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira.
Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2009
R. B. Choueri; A. Cesar; Denis Moledo de Souza Abessa; Ronaldo J. Torres; R. D. Morais; Inmaculada Riba; Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; M. R. L. Nascimento; Antonio A. Mozeto; T.A. DelValls
We aimed to develop site-specific sediment quality guidelines (SQGs) for two estuarine and port zones in Southeastern Brazil (Santos Estuarine System and Paranaguá Estuarine System) and three in Southern Spain (Ría of Huelva, Bay of Cádiz, and Bay of Algeciras), and compare these values against national and traditionally used international benchmark values. Site-specific SQGs were derived based on sediment physical-chemical, toxicological, and benthic community data integrated through multivariate analysis. This technique allowed the identification of chemicals of concern and the establishment of effects range correlatively to individual concentrations of contaminants for each site of study. The results revealed that sediments from Santos channel, as well as inner portions of the SES, are considered highly polluted (exceeding SQGs-high) by metals, PAHs and PCBs. High pollution by PAHs and some metals was found in São Vicente channel. In PES, sediments from inner portions (proximities of the Ponta do Félix ports terminal and the Port of Paranaguá) are highly polluted by metals and PAHs, including one zone inside the limits of an environmental protection area. In Gulf of Cádiz, SQGs exceedences were found in Ria of Huelva (all analysed metals and PAHs), in the surroundings of the Port of Cádiz (Bay of Cádiz) (metals), and in Bay of Algeciras (Ni and PAHs). The site-specific SQGs derived in this study are more restricted than national SQGs applied in Brazil and Spain, as well as international guidelines. This finding confirms the importance of the development of site-specific SQGs to support the characterisation of sediments and dredged material. The use of the same methodology to derive SQGs in Brazilian and Spanish port zones confirmed the applicability of this technique with an international scope and provided a harmonised methodology for site-specific SQGs derivation.
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2009
R. B. Choueri; A. Cesar; Ronaldo J. Torres; Denis Moledo de Souza Abessa; R. D. Morais; Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; M. R. L. Nascimento; Antonio A. Mozeto; Inmaculada Riba; T.A. DelValls
Sediment quality from Paranaguá Estuarine System (PES), a highly important port and ecological zone, was evaluated by assessing three lines of evidence: (1) sediment physical-chemical characteristics; (2) sediment toxicity (elutriates, sediment-water interface, and whole sediment); and (3) benthic community structure. Results revealed a gradient of increasing degradation of sediments (i.e. higher concentrations of trace metals, higher toxicity, and impoverishment of benthic community structure) towards inner PES. Data integration by principal component analysis (PCA) showed positive correlation between some contaminants (mainly As, Cr, Ni, and Pb) and toxicity in samples collected from stations located in upper estuary and one station placed away from contamination sources. Benthic community structure seems to be affected by both pollution and natural fine characteristics of the sediments, which reinforces the importance of a weight-of-evidence approach to evaluate sediments of PES.
Environmental Toxicology | 2012
Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; M.L. Martín-Díaz; M. G. M. Catharino; A. Cesar; R. B. Choueri; Satie Taniguchi; Denis Moledo de Souza Abessa; Márcia C. Bícego; M. B. A. Vasconcellos; Afonso Celso Dias Bainy; Eduinetty Ceci Pereira Moreira de Sousa; T.A. DelValls
This study aimed to provide the first biomonitoring integrating biomarkers and bioaccumulation data in São Paulo coast, Brazil and, for this purpose, a battery of biomarkers of defense mechanisms was analyzed and linked to contaminants body burden in a weigh‐of‐evidence approach. The brown mussel Perna perna was selected to be transplanted from a farming area (Caraguatatuba) to four possibly polluted sites: Engenho DÁgua, DTCS (Dutos e Terminais do Centro‐Oeste de São Paulo) oil terminal (Sao Sebastiao zone), Palmas Island, and Itaipu (It; Santos Bay zone). After 3 months of exposure in each season, mussels were recollected and the cytochrome P4501A (CYP1A)‐ and CYP3A‐like activities, glutathione‐S‐transferase and antioxidants enzymes (catalase, glutathione peroxidase, and glutathione reductase) were analyzed in gills. The concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, linear alkylbenzenes, and nonessential metals (Cr, Cd, Pb, and Hg) in whole tissue were also analyzed and data were linked to biomarkers responses by multivariate analysis (principal component analysis—factor analysis). A representation of estimated factor scores was performed to confirm the factor descriptions and to characterize the studied stations. Biomarkers exhibited most significant alterations all year long in mussels transplanted to It, located at Santos Bay zone, where bioaccumulation of organic and inorganic compounds was detected. This integrated approach using transplanted mussels showed satisfactory results, pointing out differences between sites, seasons, and critical areas, which could be related to land‐based contaminants sources. The influence of natural factors and other contaminants (e.g., pharmaceuticals) on biomarkers responses are also discussed.
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2007
Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; Denis Moledo de Souza Abessa; Afonso Celso Dias Bainy; Letícia Pires Zaroni; Marcia Regina Gasparro; Márcia C. Bícego; Satie Taniguchi; Tatiana Heid Furley; Eduinetty Ceci Pereira Moreira de Sousa
The aim of the present study was to investigate the presence of contaminants in the mussel Perna perna from São Sebastião Channel, São Paulo, Brazil, and to evaluate the effects of these contaminants on these organisms at biochemical (catalase [CAT], glutathione-S-transferase [GST], and cholinesterase [ChE]), cellular (neutral red retention time [NRRT] assay), and physiological (cardiac monitoring) levels. Two sampling surveys were performed (winter of 2001 and summer of 2002) at six stations along the channel: Cigarras, station 1; Iate Clube de Ilhabela, station 2; Oil Terminal, station 3; Toque Toque, station 4; Ponta da Sela, station 5 (reference station); and Taubaté, station 6. Differences in CAT activity were observed between mussels from stations 3 and 5 during the winter, but no differences were detected in the summer. No differences in GST activity were found among stations during the winter, although animals from station 3 showed higher activity during the summer. The ChE activity was significantly higher in the mussels from stations 1 and 2 during the winter and from stations 1 and 3 during the summer. Organisms from stations 1 through 4 showed statistically lower NRRT in both seasons. Similar heart rates were observed in the mussels from all stations. Hydrocarbons were detected in organisms from all the stations in both seasons. During the winter, higher polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) levels were observed in organisms from station 3, whereas during the summer, higher levels of metals were found in organisms from stations 1, 3, and 4. The multivariate analyses showed a strong influence of PAHs on the winter biological results, but metals showed higher influence on these responses in the summer, indicating multiple contaminant sources.
Genetics and Molecular Biology | 2009
Aline A. Kirschbaum; Robson Seriani; Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; Andrea Assuncao; Denis Modelo de Souza Abessa; Matheus Marcos Rotundo; Maria José Tavares Ranzani-Paiva
The aquatic environment receives many contaminants that can induce damages at the molecular, biochemical, cellular and physiological levels. Centropomus parallelus, an important food resource for local populations, is a predator fish that feeds on small fishes and benthic invertebrates, thus being vulnerable to the bioconcentration and biomagnification processes. This study aimed to evaluate cytogenotoxic responses in erythrocytes from C. parallelus juveniles collected in the Cananéia and São Vicente estuaries, both in winter and in summer. After anesthesia, blood samples were collected by caudal puncture. Blood smears were prepared on glass slides and stained with May-Grünwald-Giemsa dye. Two thousand cells were analyzed per slide (1000x), and nuclear abnormalities (NA) and micronuclei (MN) were scored. The São Vicente sample showed MN and NA frequencies (%/1000 cells) of 0.325 and 3.575, in winter, and of 0.125 and 2.935 in summer respectively; the Cananéia sample showed frequencies of 0.0325 and 0.03, in winter, and of 0.065 and 0.355 in summer, respectively. The rates found in São Vicente were significantly higher than those found in Cananéia, evidencing that the levels of pollution in that estuary were high enough to induce genetic damages.
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2011
Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; M.L. Martín-Díaz; Juliano Zanette; Augusto Cesar; Rodrigo Brasil Choueri; Denis Moledo de Souza Abessa; M. G. M. Catharino; M. B. A. Vasconcellos; Afonso Celso Dias Bainy; Eduinetty Ceci Pereira Moreira de Sousa; Tomás Ángel Del Valls
São Paulo state (Brazil) has one of the most overpopulated coastal zones in South America, where previous studies have already detected sediment and water contamination. However, biological-based monitoring considering signals of xenobiotic exposure and effects are scarce. The present study employed a battery of biomarkers under field conditions to assess the environmental quality of this coastal zone. For this purpose, the activity of CYP 450, antioxidant enzymes, DNA damage, lipid peroxidation and lysosomal membrane were analysed in caged mussels and integrated using Factorial Analysis. A representation of estimated factor scores was performed in order to confirm the factor descriptions characterizing the studied areas. Biomarker responses indicated signals of mussels impaired health during the monitoring, which pointed to the impact of different sources of contaminants in the water quality and identified critical areas. This integrated approach produced a rapid, sensitive and cost-effective assessment, which could be incorporated as a descriptor of environmental status in future coastal zones biomonitoring.
Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 2006
A. Cesar; Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; Aldo Ramos Santos; Denis M. S. Abessa; Nuria Fernández; R. B. Choueri; Tomaz Angel DelValls
Sediments represent an important repository of pollutants and a source of contamination for the aquatic food web. Toxicity tests using amphipods as test-organisms have been employed in the assessment of marine and estuarine sediments, together with chemical analyses. The present work aimed to evaluate the quality of sediments from six stations situated in the Santos and Sao Vicente Estuarine and Harbour System (Sao Paulo - Brazil) using acute whole sediment toxicity tests with amphipods (Tiburonella viscana) and chemical analyses of metals, PCBs, and PAHs. Other sediment parameters, such as organic carbon and grain size distribution were also analysed. Higher contamination levels were observed in the internal portion of the estuary, where Santos harbour and the industrial zone are located. The toxicity tests showed significant adverse results for most of the samples tested, and the sediments from the internal portion of the estuary presented the highest toxicity. The principal component analyses (PCA) indicated a close relationship between sediment contamination and toxicity. Positive correlation of these factors in the samples studied was used to establish the ranges of the chemical concentrations associated with adverse effects. Such ranges allowed the estimation of preliminary effect threshold values for sediment contamination, by means of multivariate analysis. These suggested values are: Cu, 69.0; Pb, 17.4; Zn, 73.3 (mg.kg-1); PAHs, 0.5 (mg.kg-1) and PCBs, 0.1 (µg.kg-1).
Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2005
Denis Moledo de Souza Abessa; Letícia Pires Zaroni; Eduinetty Ceci Pereira Moreira de Sousa; Marcia Regina Gasparro; Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; Bauer Rodarte de Figueredo Rachid; Michael H. Depledge; Rebecca Susan King
The physiological conditions of mussels from Ubatuba and Santos and also of organisms transplanted from Ubatuba to Santos were studied by using different techniques. Assays for lysosomal stability were conducted on the haemolymph. Heart rate activity was monitored for 6h. The embryonic development of larvae obtained from the collected mussels was analysed. For all the compared groups of mussels, no significant differences were observed for the cardiac activity monitoring and the embryonic bioassays. The mean Neutral Red (NR) retention time was similar for the animals from Santos and Ubatuba, whereas the organisms transplanted to Santos showed a reduction in the retention time of the dye, indicating damage in the lysosomal membranes. These differences were possibly due to environmental factors, but further investigations are required to confirm this hypothesis.
Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2009
A. Cesar; Denis Moledo de Souza Abessa; Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; Aldo Ramos Santos; Nuria Fernández; R. B. Choueri; T.A. DelValls
ABSTRACT In this work, multivariate and numeric methods were used to integrate the chemical and ecotoxicological data obtained for the sediments from the Santos Estuarine System, and for the vicinity of the discharges of the Submarine Sewage Outfall of Santos, in order to establish more accurately the environmental risks, identify the priority areas and thus provide guidance to control the programs and public policies. For both the datasets, the concentrations which exceeded numeric sediment guidelines tended to be associated to toxicity. For the estuary, this trend was corroborated by the correlations between the toxicity and Cu and PAHs levels, whereas for the sewage outfall region, this was observed through the correlation between the toxicity and Hg contents. Ratio-to-mean values were calculated for each sample, in order to rank them according to the toxicity and contamination. Cluster analyses confirmed the ranking results. For the estuary, three categories of sediments were established: stations SSV-2, SSV-3 and SSV-4 were under major risks, followed by SSV-6. Stations SSV-1 and SSV-5 were not altered. Concerning to the sewage outfall, stations 1 and 2 presented better quality, whereas station 5 seemed to be under risk, followed by stations 3 and 4, which exhibited some signs of alteration
Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 2013
Robson Seriani; Denis Moledo de Souza Abessa; Camilo Dias Seabra Pereira; Aline A. Kirschbaum; Andrea Assuncao; Maria José Tavares Ranzani-Paiva
No presente estudo, foram utilizados parâmetros hematologicos do peixe tropical estuarino Centropomus parallelus como biomarcador nao destrutivo. Os peixes foram coletados, no verao e no inverno, em dois estuarios: Cananeia (CAN) e Sao Vicente (SVE). Foram analisados: hematocrito (Ht), contagem de eritrocitos (RBC), volume corpuscular medio (VCM), leucograma (WBC) e trombograma. Os peixes de ambos locais apresentaram variacoes no quadro hematologico devido a sazonalidade e aos niveis de degradacao ambiental. Os peixes de Cananeia apresentaram aumento no numero absoluto de trombocitos no verao, enquanto aqueles coletados em Sao Vicente apresentaram hematocrito (Ht) e Volume Corpuscular Medio (MCV) menor no inverno. Comparando o quadro hematologico dos peixes dos dois estuarios, observamos maiores valores de hematocrito (Ht), Volume Corpuscular Medio (MCV), leucocitos (WBC), e numero de eritrocitos (RBC) nos peixes de Sao Vicente no verao, enquanto no inverno, Ht e trombocitos foram tambem maiores nos peixes desse local. Os resultados sugerem que as alteracoes observadas no quadro hematologico se deveram a qualidade ambiental dos estuarios e a sazonalidade.