Ruth Martí
Spanish National Research Council
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Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2003
Emma Cebrian; Ruth Martí; Javier Uriz; Xavier Turon
The effect of low levels of pollution on the growth, reproduction output, morphology and survival of adult sponges and settlers of the sponge Crambe crambe were examined. We transplanted sponges from a control area to a contaminated site and measured the main environmental variables (chemical and physical) of both sites during the study period. Except some punctual differences in particulate organic matter, silicates, nitrates, and water motion, most environmental variables in the water were similar at both sites during the study months. Mainly copper, lead and OM concentrations in the sediment, and water motion were significantly higher at the polluted site and may be implicated in the biological effects observed: decrease in the percentage of specimens with embryos, increase in shape irregularity and decrease in growth rate. Individuals naturally occurring at the polluted site and those transplanted there for four months accumulated ten times more copper than either untouched or transplant controls. Although lead concentration in sediment did not differ between sites, native specimens from the contaminated site accumulated this metal more than untouched controls. Vanadium concentration also tended to increase in the sponges living at or transplanted to the contaminated site but this difference was not significant. C. crambe is a reliable indicator of metal contamination since it accumulates copper, lead and vanadium in high amounts. At the contaminated site, sponge growth, fecundity and survival were inhibited, whereas sponge irregularity ending in sponge fission was promoted. All these effects may compromise the structure and dynamics of the sponge populations in sheltered, metal-contaminated habitats.
Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2003
Ruth Martí; Angelo Fontana; María-J. Uriz; Guido Cimino
Microtox® assay was used to assess the natural toxicity of two sponges, Dysidea avara and Ircinia variabilis. The activity of crude extracts and major metabolites were compared. Methanol extract of D. avara was more toxic than that of acetone and was as toxic as pure avarol, thus suggesting that the toxicity of the sponge was mainly due to this metabolite. We also quantified palinurin, the major metabolite of I. variabilis, in specimens from several habitats. With the same methanol extracts used for palinurin quantification, we ran the Microtox® assay and found a positive significant regression between toxicity and concentration of this metabolite. Pure palinurin was tested at the same concentration present in the extract, and the toxicity recorded was higher than that of the methanol extract. As with avarol from D. avara, palinurin is the main secondary metabolite that confers toxicity to I. variabilis. The results confirm that the standardized Microtox® assay is an accurate and reproducible tool for assessing the toxicity of crude extracts and pure metabolites of marine organisms. These results also suggest that methanol is more suitable than acetone for the detection of species toxicity by Microtox® The method is faster and easier to perform than chemical quantification even when the sponge chemistry is known, and is appropriate for studies on variation in natural toxicity over a range of environmental conditions.
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 1998
María Jesús Uriz; Manuel Maldonado; Xavier Turon; Ruth Martí
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2004
Ruth Martí; María Jesús Uriz; Enric Ballesteros; Xavier Turon
Environmental Pollution | 2006
Emma Cebrian; Gemma Agell; Ruth Martí; María Jesús Uriz
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2004
Ruth Martí; María Jesús Uriz; Xavier Turon
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2001
Gemma Agell; María Jesús Uriz; Emma Cebrian; Ruth Martí
Scientia Marina | 2009
Xavier Turon; Ruth Martí; María Jesús Uriz
Scientia Marina | 2005
Ruth Martí; María Jesús Uriz; Xavier Turon
Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2005
Ruth Martí; María Jesús Uriz; Enric Ballesteros; Xavier Turon