Eduardo Mendes da Silva
Federal University of Bahia
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Featured researches published by Eduardo Mendes da Silva.
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2005
Matilde Moreira-Santos; Ana L. Fonseca; Susana M. Moreira; Jaime Rendón-Von Osten; Eduardo Mendes da Silva; Amadeu M.V.M. Soares; Lúcia Guilhermino; Rui Ribeiro
This study proposes assays with a freshwater chironomid, Chironomus xanthus, distributed over South America, based on subindividual (acetylcholinesterase activity) and individual (survival and postexposure feeding) level endpoints. Sediment and aquatic-rooted floating macrophyte assays were developed, due to the importance of both substrates for toxicant exposure in subtropical/tropical environments. Assays were evaluated under realistic exposure scenarios by simulating a runoff over an agricultural field dosed with deltamethrin. In situ assays were performed within microcosms to discriminate the effects of deltamethrin from those of additional potential stress factors (organism handling and caging, microcosms, use of aquatic roots, and runoff per se). A laboratory sediment assay based on feeding was conducted with samples from the microcosms. In all assays, both sublethal endpoints were responsive to deltamethrin and more sensitive than survival. Survival and feeding were more sensitive in situ than in the laboratory. In the in situ sediment assays, both sublethal endpoints were within a similar range of sensitivity; they were significantly inhibited as of the lowest Decis dose, from approximately 20 to 70%. In situ feeding was more sensitive in the sediment than in the macrophyte assay, where it was inhibited significantly only at the two highest Decis doses (up to approximately 60%). Larval performance was not influenced significantly by any of the other potential stress factors.
Chemosphere | 1998
Eduardo Mendes da Silva; Amadeu M.V.M. Soares; Olímpia Sobral; Isabel Lopes; Jorge F.J.S. Correia; Elisabete M.D.C. Marchante; Carla Chastinet; António J. Moreno
Abstract In vitro assays with isolated rat liver mitochondria and sub-mitochondrial particles (SMP) of beef heart were compared with acute Daphnia magna test and Microtox®, in order to establish different sensitivities when exposed to complex effluents. Median effective concentration (EC50) were calculated using the probit analysis, considering several endpoints: immobilisation for D. magna assays, luminescence decrease of the marine bacterium Photobacterium phosphoreum, inhibition of succinate generated potential or the depolarisation caused by ADP addition for rat liver mitochondria by the mithocondrial transmembrane electric potential (TEP) and reduction in the amount of NADH oxidised by the electron transport system to form NAD+ in the case of the forward electron transport (FET) or the NADH amount that is reduced to NAD+ for SMP, in the case of the reverse electron transfer (RET). The TEP tests showed to be more sensitive than the others one are. The results obtained indicate the convenience of utilising in vitro systems such as the TEP or even SMP to test whole effluent ecotoxicity.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Júlia Carina Niemeyer; Matilde Moreira-Santos; Rui Ribeiro; M. Rutgers; Marco Antonio Nogueira; Eduardo Mendes da Silva; José Paulo Sousa
This study presents data on the detailed evaluation (tier 2) of a site-specific ecological risk assessment (ssERA) in a former smelter area contaminated with metals (Santo Amaro, Bahia, Brazil). Combining information from three lines of evidence (LoE), chemical (ChemLoE), ecotoxicological (EcotoxLoE) and ecological (EcoLoE), in the Triad approach, integrated risk values were calculated to rank sites and confirm the potential risk disclosed with tier 1. Risk values were calculated for the habitat and for the retention functions in each sampling point. Habitat function included the ChemLoE calculated from total metal concentrations. The EcotoxLoE was based on reproduction tests with terrestrial invertebrates (Folsomia candida, Enchytraeus crypticus, Eisenia andrei), shoot length and plant biomass (Avena sativa, Brassica rapa). For the EcoLoE, ecological parameters (microbial parameters, soil invertebrate community, litter breakdown) were used to derive risk values. Retention function included the ChemLoE, calculated from extractable metal concentrations, and the EcotoxLoE based on eluate tests with aquatic organisms (Daphnia magna reproduction and Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata growth). Results related to the habitat function indicated that the metal residues are sufficient to cause risk to biota, while the low metal levels in extracts and the general lack of toxicity in aquatic tests indicated a high soil retention capacity in most sampling points. Integrated risk of tier 2 showed the same trend of tier 1, suggesting the need to proceed with remediation actions. The high risk levels were related to direct toxicity to organisms and indirect effects, such as failure in the establishment of vegetation and the consequent loss of habitat quality for microorganisms and soil fauna. This study shed some light on the selection of tools for the tier 2 of an ssERA in tropical metal-contaminated sites, focusing on ecological receptors at risk and using available chemical methods, ecological surveys and ecotoxicity tests.
Diatom Research | 2009
Fernanda Ferrari; Carlos E. Wetzel; Luc Ector; Saúl Blanco; João Cláudio Cerqueira Viana; Eduardo Mendes da Silva; Denise de Campos Bicudo
The diatom flora of tropical freshwater environments of South America is unique when compared to temperate areas of the continent such as Austral and Antarctic zones, where the species composition tends to present many cosmopolitan elements. The present work describes a new diatom species from the Chapada Diamantina (BA, Brazil), a semi-arid region of Northeastern Brazil, belonging to the recently described monospecific genus Perinotia Metzeltin & Lange-Bertalot. This work also provides additional information on valve structure observed under electron and light microscopy for the generitype. Perinotia diamantina differs from the type species, P. jankae Metzeltin & Lange-Bertalot, by presenting greater valve width and smaller length/width ratio. Irregularly distributed puncta around the terminal raphe endings also differ between P. diamantine from P. jankae. Ecological information for both species is given.
Chemosphere | 2008
Cristiano V.M. Araújo; Salomão J. Cohin-de-Pinho; Carla B.A. Chastinet; Jéssica S. Santos; Eduardo Mendes da Silva
Toxic potential of the pH reduction to fingerlings of Poecilia reticulata, through acute toxicity bioassays, as well as the influence of increased pH on the toxicity were assessed. Acid lake samples (Dunas Lake) were collected during 19 months, and assessed with following treatments: water at local pH (+/-3.0) and samples with modified pH to 3.5, 3.8, 4.0, 4.3, 4.6, 5.0, 5.5, 6.0, and 6.5. Culture water samples with pH reduced to 3.0 were also assessed. Newborn P. reticulata were exposed during 96h, and dead/immobile organisms were counted at various time intervals during exposure (short intervals in the beginning and long towards the end). Mean results of LT50 and confidence intervals from the Dunas Lake and control water with reduced pH were 1.36 (+/-0.48)h, and 1.03 (+/-0.50)h, respectively, with no statistical difference. Samples with increased pH showed a significant reduction in toxicity, with no toxicity detected at pH 6.0 and higher. Relationship between pH and lethal toxicity for fingerlings of P. reticulata demonstrated that pH exerted a strong effect on the survival of this species at the Dunas Lake, explaining about 80% of the toxicity observed.
Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2007
Carla A. Oliveira; Cristiano V.M. Araújo; Renato B. Nascimento; Uwe J. Strotmann; Eduardo Mendes da Silva
The treatment efficiency of industrial effluents, after biological treatment by activated sludge in aeration tanks (AT), was assessed through the utilisation of respirometry tests at the Cetrels-wastewater treatment plant (WTP). Samples of the equalised effluent (EE), prior to treatment, and of the treated effluent (TE), after treatment, were analysed. Twenty bioassays batch were carried out to AT (AT-2, AT-3 and AT-4). Each test consisted of: a basic test, a basic test with peptone added, a test using EE and a test using TE. The data showed that there was no statistically significant difference (p>0.05) in the respiration activity between the aeration tanks. Regarding the specific oxygen uptake rate there was a mean reduction of 70.8% between the tests performed with EE and TE. The results demonstratd that respirometry tests could successfully assess the efficiency of the activated sludge process and, therefore, be adopted as tool for the monitoring from the WTP.
Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2009
Júlia Carina Niemeyer; V. C. Santos; Paula Beatriz Araujo; Eduardo Mendes da Silva
Reproduction of the isopod Cubaris murina was studied in the laboratory in order to observe the offspring number per brood, the number and duration of the incubation periods, and the influence of repeated mating on number of young per brood. An experiment was conducted with two different groups: female/male pairs and females that were isolated after mating. No significant difference was found between the two reproductive female groups for the mean number of young per brood (x = 25) and the duration of the incubation periods (x = 17 days). One mating was enough for at least five broods, with no reduction in brood size. There was no significant difference between the number of adult males and females. Low-density cultures had a significantly higher growth rate compared to high-density cultures. Furthermore, the experimental results for optimization isopod culture conditions for terrestrial ecotoxicity testing are reported.
Diatom Research | 2012
Doriedson Ferreira Gomes; Oberdan Caldas; Eduardo Mendes da Silva; Peter Gell; David M. Williams
This paper describes the scientific life of Father Zimmermann, Brazils first diatomist. Father Zimmermann, a Jesuit priest born in Ehingen, Germany in 1871, studied theology in Britain in the early 20th century. His scientific life began in Portugal where, with other Jesuits, he founded the scientific journal Brotéria, for which he wrote several papers on diatoms. After the fall of the Portuguese monarchy in 1910, several conservative priests, including Zimmermann, immigrated to Brazil. In Brazil, he became a teacher at the Padre Antonio Vieira School in Salvador in the state of Bahia, where he taught a myriad of disciplines. In addition to his teaching and religious activities, along with his fellow priests, Zimmermann continued to edit Brotéria. By the end of his career in Portugal, Zimmermann had described a total of 69 new but not all valid diatom names. In 1913, Zimmermann began a series of articles entitled ‘Contribuição para o estudo das diatomaceas dos Estados Unidos do Brazil’ (Contribution to the study of diatoms of the United States of Brazil), in which he described two new genera and 49 new species from rivers, lakes, wetlands, reservoirs and beaches in the states of Bahia, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Rio Grande do Sul. In addition to his taxonomic descriptions, Zimmermann who was an accomplished naturalist, also wrote about diatom movements and evolution. His diatom studies were compiled in a book entitled Diatomées, which has never been published. Father Zimmermanns contribution to the study of diatoms deserves proper recognition. This paper aims to serve such purpose. Farther Zimmermann died in Salvador in 1950.
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2017
Aloysio da S. Ferrão-Filho; Daniel de Abreu S. Silva; Taissa A. de Oliveira; Valéria Freitas de Magalhães; Stephan Pflugmacher; Eduardo Mendes da Silva
Cyanobacteria produce different toxic compounds that affect animal life, among them hepatotoxins and neurotoxins. Because cyanobacteria are able to produce a variety of toxic compounds at the same time, organisms may be, generally, subjected to their combined action. In the present study, we demonstrate the single and combined effects on cladocerans of cyanobacteria that produce microcystins (hepatotoxins) and saxitoxins (neurotoxins). Animals were exposed (either singly or combined) to 2 strains of cyanobacteria isolated from the same environment (Funil Reservoir, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil). The effects on clearance rate, mobility, survivorship, fecundity, population increase rate (r), and the antioxidant enzymes glutathione-S-transferase (GST) and catalase (CAT) were measured. Cladoceran species showed a variety of responses to cyanobacterial exposures, going from no effect to impairment of swimming movement, lower survivorship, fecundity, and general fitness (r). Animals ingested cyanobacteria in all treatments, although at lower rates than good food (green algae). Antioxidant defense responses were in accordance with fitness responses, suggesting that oxidative stress may be related to such effects. The present study emphasizes the need for testing combined actions of different classes of toxins, because this is often, and most likely, the scenario in a more eutrophic world with global climatic changes. Environ Toxicol Chem 2017;36:2689-2697.
Chemosphere | 2015
Ticiana Soares de Andrade de Carvalho-Pereira; Thirza de Santana Santos; Edilene M.S. Pestana; Fábio Neves Souza; Vivian Marina Gomes Barbosa Lage; Bárbara Janaína Bezerra Nunesmaia; Palloma Thaís Souza Sena; Eduardo Mariano-Neto; Eduardo Mendes da Silva
Cultivation medium is one of the first aspects to be considered in zooplankton laboratory cultivation. The use of artificial media does not concern to reproduce natural conditions to the cultivations, which may be achieved by using natural organic compounds like humic substances (HS). This study aimed to evaluate the effects of a concentrate of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from the Negro River (NR(1)) and an extraction of humic acids (HA) from humus produced by Eisenia andrei on the life history traits of laboratory-based Latonopsis australis SARS (1888). A cohort life table approach was used to provide information about the effectiveness of NR and HA as supplements for the artificial cultivation of L. australis. Additionally, we seek to observe a maximization of L. australis artificial cultivation fitness by expanding the range of HS concentrations. The first experiment demonstrated that the females of L. australis reared under NR10 (mgDOCL(-1)) may have experienced an acceleration of the population life cycle, as the females have proportionally reproduced more and lived shorter than controls. By contrast, the use of the HA did not improve life history traits considered. The expansion of the concentration range (5, 10, 20 and 50 mgDOCL(-1)) corroborated the patterns observed on the first assay. Results for the fitness estimates combined with shorter lifespans than controls demonstrated trade-offs between reproductive output and female longevity reared under NR conditions, with NR20 been suggested as the best L. australis cultivation medium. This response might be associated with hormone-like effects.