G. M. Pieterse
University of Johannesburg
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Featured researches published by G. M. Pieterse.
Environmental Toxicology | 2009
M. J. Marchand; J. C. van Dyk; G. M. Pieterse; Irene E.J. Barnhoorn; M. S. Bornman
There is a need for sensitive bio‐monitoring tools in toxicant impact assessment to indicate the effect of toxicants on fish health in polluted aquatic ecosystems. Histopathological assessment of fish tissue allows for early warning signs of disease and detection of long‐term injury in cells, tissues, or organs. The aim of this study was to assess the degree of histopathological alterations in the liver of C. gariepinus from two dams in an urban nature reserve, (Gauteng, South Africa). Two dams (Dam 1 and Dam 2) were chosen for their suspected levels of toxicants. Water and sediments were sampled for metal and potential endocrine disrupting chemical analysis. A quantitative and qualitative histology‐based health assessment protocol was employed to determine the adverse health effects in fish. The analysis of blood constituents, fish necropsy, calculation of condition factors, and hepatosomatic indices were employed to support the findings of the qualitative and quantitative histological assessment of liver tissue. Assessment of the liver tissue revealed marked histopathological alterations including: structural alterations (hepatic cord disarray) affecting 27% of field specimens; plasma alterations (granular degeneration 98% and fatty degeneration 25%) of hepatocytes; an increase in melanomacrophage centers (32%); hepatocyte nuclear alterations (90%); and necrosis of liver tissue (14%). The quantitative histological assessment indicated that livers of fish collected from Dam 1 were more affected than the fish livers collected from Dam 2.
African Journal of Aquatic Science | 2009
J. C. van Dyk; M. J. Marchand; Nico J. Smit; G. M. Pieterse
The health status of four commercially and ecologically important fish species from the Okavango Delta was assessed, using a histology-based health assessment protocol, to establish baseline data for future toxicity studies. Following the calculation of a necropsy-based health assessment index (HAI), the histological responses of the liver, gills and gonads were assessed and compared between Clarias gariepinus, C. ngamensis, Oreochromis andersonii and Serranochromis angusticeps. Population HAI results showed that O. andersonii was most affected in terms of necropsy-related alterations, followed by S. angusticeps, whilst identical low values were calculated for C. ngamensis and C. gariepinus. Quantitative histological results corresponded with the HAI results. The liver and gills of O. andersonii were most affected in terms of the percentage prevalence of the histological alterations identified. These were mostly associated with inflammation, and progressive and regressive changes. The histology of the liver and gills was also more affected in terms of the type and severity of the histological alterations identified, compared to that in the gonads of all four species. The majority of alterations were most likely caused by the prevalence of parasitic infections.
African Journal of Aquatic Science | 2009
J. C. van Dyk; M. J. Marchand; G. M. Pieterse; Iej Barnhoorn; Bornman
A semi-quantitative histological assessment was used to investigate histological changes in the gills of Clarias gariepinus from Marais Dam and Rietvlei Dam near Pretoria, which receive effluent from sewage treatment plants and industries, as well as runoff from informal settlements. Results were compared to those from a laboratory-bred reference group offish. Histological alterations were prevalent in fish from both impoundments, including circulatory disturbances such as telangiectasia and epithelial lifting, hyperplasia of mucous cells and epithelial cells between secondary lamellae, structural alterations in the form of fusion and branching of primary and secondary lamellae, and regressive changes in the form of intracellular alterations within gill epithelial cells. Significantly higher histological index values were calculated for fish from Marais Dam compared to those from Rietvlei Dam.
African Journal of Aquatic Science | 2010
Ml Mokae; Jhj van Vuren; G. M. Pieterse
The use of exfoliative cytology as a bio-assessment tool was evaluated to (1) identify and describe different cell types of normal liver cytology of Oreochromis mossambicus, (2) identify and describe changes in the cell types after exposure to cadmium and zinc, and (3) determine if non-imaging-guided fine-needle aspiration (FNA) cytology can be performed without sacrificing the fish. All fish used in the aspiration experiment recovered and survived. Livers of O. mossambicus exposed to cadmium and zinc showed excess numbers of exfoliated red blood cells, loss of cellular cohesion, regenerative hyperplasia, pale and weak cytoplasm staining, pronounced vacuolation and degeneration. Cadmium and zinc exposure induced pathological cellular changes. Exfoliative cytology is thus a safe, cost-effective and reliable bio-assessment tool.
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2007
J. C. van Dyk; G. M. Pieterse; J.H.J. Van Vuren
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2010
Irene E.J. Barnhoorn; J. C. van Dyk; G. M. Pieterse; M. S. Bornman
Journal of Applied Ichthyology | 2008
J. C. van Dyk; G. M. Pieterse
Journal of Applied Ichthyology | 2010
G. M. Pieterse; M. J. Marchand; J. C. van Dyk; Irene E.J. Barnhoorn
Journal of Applied Ichthyology | 2010
M. J. Marchand; G. M. Pieterse; Irene E.J. Barnhoorn
WRC Report | 2010
M. S. Bornman; E. J. Barnhoorn; Bettina Genthe; J.H.J. Van Vuren; G. M. Pieterse; Natalie H. Aneck-Hahn; J. C. van Dyk; C. de Jager; Kerry Brink; M. J. Marchand; Sean Mark Patrick; M. C. van Zijl