Modelling environment contamination with heavy metals in flathead grey mullet Mugil cephalus and upper sediments from north African coasts of the Mediterranean Sea

2018 ◽  
Vol 639 ◽  
pp. 156-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naouel Ouali ◽  
Bourhane-Eddine Belabed ◽  
Haroun Chenchouni
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (04) ◽  
pp. 4996
Author(s):  
Mohammad El-Mor ◽  
Souad A. M. Moftah ◽  
Yousef K. A. Abdalafid* ◽  
Bulkasim M. Abdulnabi

The reproductive physiology of 530 specimens of Mugil cephalus (Family: Mugilidae) were collected from catches by gill and trammel nets operating on Benghazi coast on Mediterranean Sea - Libya  was studied, there were monthly variations in sex ratio and a tendency for females (298 fish = 56.2%) than males (232 fish = 43.8%) for the whole population, Overall sex ratio was (1 : 1.28) for males to females respectively, First maturation size was determined for females L50  = 34.1 cm and for males L50  = 32.3 cm, All individuals have definite breeding season which extends from July to October, An increase in Oocyte diameters was evident in July (489 µ ± 5.34), and this increase continued in the following months till October (599 µ ± 11.04), the absolute fecundity ranged from 578981 to 2598022 for fish total length ranging from 19.5 to 47.4 cm, whereas relative fecundity ranged from 29036 to 57352 / cm.


Author(s):  
Benjamin Enahoro Assay

There is a growing concern about African migrants who risk their lives to embark on hazardous journeys across dozens of borders and the treacherous waves of the Mediterranean Sea in search of a better life in Europe. Cable News Network footage of a live auction in Libya, where black youths were presented to north African buyers as potential farmhands and sold for as little as $400 confirm the fears and brought to the fore the ugly reality of the plight of illegal migrants. Aside, the narratives in the media about migration also give cause for concern. In the midst of the general invisibility of illegal migrants in the media, most portrayals refer to migrants in connection with themes of ‘trafficking', ‘prostitution', ‘slavery', and ‘death' because cases of enslavement, drowning, and killings of trafficked Africans in search of utopia greener pastures flood newspapers, magazines, and broadcast space. It is against this backdrop that this chapter proffers solutions and recommends ways to halt illegal migration and change media narratives about migration in Africa.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valentina Zagaria

The Mediterranean Sea has recently become the deadliest of borders for illegalised travellers. The victims of the European Union’s liquid border are also found near North African shores. The question of how and where to bury these unknown persons has recently come to the fore in Zarzis, a coastal town in south-east Tunisia. Everyone involved in these burials – the coastguards, doctors, Red Crescent volunteers, municipality employees – agree that what they are doing is ‘wrong’. It is neither dignified nor respectful to the dead, as the land used as a cemetery is an old waste dump, and customary attitudes towards the dead are difficult to realise. This article will first trace how this situation developed, despite the psychological discomfort of all those affected. It will then explore how the work of care and dignity emerges within this institutional chain, and what this may tell us about what constitutes the concept of the human.


2016 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 47-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Tovar-Sánchez ◽  
Gotzon Basterretxea ◽  
Mostapha Ben Omar ◽  
Antoni Jordi ◽  
David Sánchez-Quiles ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 154 ◽  
pp. 111042 ◽  
Author(s):  
Owhonda Chikeru Ihunwo ◽  
Amalo Ndu Dibofori-Orji ◽  
Clifford Olowu ◽  
Millicent Uzoamaka Ibezim-Ezeani

2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 125-139
Author(s):  
Ashgan Abou-Gabal ◽  
Eman Abbas ◽  
Hala Ali ◽  
Nagy El-Baramawi ◽  
Asmaa Khaled ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 79 ◽  
Author(s):  
O.A. EL-RAYIS ◽  
M.A.M. ABDALLAH

In 2003 the MAP Technical Report Series 141, mentioned the lack of data concerning the flux of water, sediments and pollutants from North-African rivers and from the land-based sources to the Mediterranean Sea.In Egypt, the Omoum drain, after the construction of the Aswan High Dam and the controlling of the Nile River water fl ow, has become one of the main land-based sources regularly discharging its waters (fl ow rate 2547.7 x 106 m3/year) directly into the Mediterranean Sea at EL-Mex Bay, west of Alexandria. Downstream, before it reaches the sea, its water mixes with water effl uent (surplus water) from a neighboring sewage-polluted lake called Lake Maryout, rate 262.8 x 106 m3/year.The present work is a monthly study over a year of levels of concentration of some mainly trace elements (nutrients and some heavy metals) in the proper water of the drain before mixing and in the effl uent from the lake, and calculations of both the concentrations and the corresponding expected loads of these elements contributed by the drain to the sea. The results revealed that the respective loads to the sea are 77380 ton/year for total suspended matter, 823 tons/year for dissolved PO4 -P, 4745 tons/year for inorganic N, 23.7 tons/year for Fe, 3.28 tons/year for Mn, 5.84 tons/year for Cu, 2.9 ton/year for Cd, and 24 tons/year for Zn. The elements loaded by the lake effl uent represent values ranging between 8 and 57.5% of the total load contributed by the drain to the sea. The plant nutrients (ammonia and reactive phosphorus) are of values exceeding 44%.


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