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Toxics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 241
Author(s):  
Ernesto Oregel-Zamudio ◽  
Dioselina Alvarez-Bernal ◽  
Marina Olivia Franco-Hernandez ◽  
Hector Rene Buelna-Osben ◽  
Miguel Mora

Lake Chapala is the largest natural freshwater reservoir in Mexico and the third largest lake in Latin America. Lakes are often considered the final deposit of polluting materials; they can be concentrated in the organisms that inhabit them, the water, and the sediments. The PCBs and PBDEs are environmental pollutants highly studied for their known carcinogenic and mutagenic effects. PCB and PBDE bioaccumulation levels were determined in Chirostoma spp., Cyprinus carpio, and Oreochromis aureus. In addition, we monitored the concentrations of PCBs and PBDEs in sediment and water from Lake Chapala were monitored. Samples were collected during two periods, in October 2018 and May 2019. The samples were analyzed by gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry. Two bioaccumulation factors were determined in fish, one in relation to the concentration of PCBs and PBDEs in sediments and the other in relation to the concentration of PCBs and PBDEs in water. The PCB levels were 0.55–3.29 ng/g dry weight (dw) in sediments, 1.43–2.98 ng/mL in water, 0.30–5.31 ng/g dw in Chirostoma spp., 1.06–6.07 ng/g dw in Cyprinus carpio, and 0.55–7.20 ng/g dw in Oreochromis aureus. The levels of PBDEs were 0.17–0.35 ng/g dw in sediments, 0.13–0.32 ng/mL in water, 0.01–0.23 ng/g dw in Chirostoma spp., 0–0.31 ng/g dw in Cyprinus carpio, and 0.1–0.22 ng/g dw in Oreochromis aureus. This study provides information for a better understanding of the movement, global distribution, and bioaccumulation of PCBs and PBDEs. The results show that the fish, water, and sediments of Lake Chapala are potential risks to the biota and the local human population.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (13) ◽  
pp. 6087
Author(s):  
Claudia Alvarado ◽  
Diego M. Cortez-Valladolid ◽  
Enrique J. Herrera-López ◽  
Ximena Godínez ◽  
José Martín Ramírez

Aquaculture offers great potential for fish production in Lake Chapala, but reports of heavy metal contamination in fish have identified a main concern for this activity. In the present study, cultures of the species Cyprinus carpio and Ictalurus punctatus were grown in a net cage in Lake Chapala. The patterns of heavy metal accumulation (Cu, Zn, Cd, Hg, Pb, As) in muscle and liver were monitored in order to evaluate the level of metal incorporation in the fish. Estimates of weekly metal intake (EWI) were made based on the results of the concentrations in edible parts of fish of commercial size. The patterns of metal bioaccumulation between tissues and species showed that liver had a higher concentrating capacity for Zn, Cu, Cd, and Pb. In contrast, similar concentrations of Hg and As were found in the liver and muscle tissue. According to the EWI estimates, the heavy metals in these cultured fish do not represent a risk for human consumption.


2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-88
Author(s):  
José Luis Barragán-Ramírez ◽  
Benjamín Hernández ◽  
María Guadalupe Velarde-Aguilar ◽  
Oscar Pérez-Flores ◽  
José Luis Navarrete-Heredia ◽  
...  

The Big-footed Leopard Frog (Lithobates megapoda) is a threatened and endemic species from western Mexico. This species has aquatic habits and it is distinguished by its large size, particularly by the length of its legs, reason for which it is captured for human consumption. Also, knowledge about its natural history is scarce and incomplete. In this study, we analyzed the composition of the diet of L. megapoda on the shore of Lake Chapala, the largest lake in Mexico. A total of 69 adult individuals were collected lifeless in fishing nets, during the rainy season (June-October), of which 48 had stomach contents. A total of 96 prey items were identified, which correspond to 13 prey categories. Fish constituted the most dominant prey category in the diet in terms of number, volume, frequency of occurrence, and relative importance. No significant differences were found in the consumption by prey type (aquatic or terrestrial). However, the aquatic preys had a greater relative importance and were more voluminous than the terrestrial ones. The diversity of prey categories, in terms of prey volume, indicates males may have a higher dietary diversity than females, but we not evaluated possible bias. In addition, a significant effect was found in the interaction of size (SVL) of frogs with the average of prey volume. Females (that are larger than males) consumed prey within a wide volume range and, the larger they are, more voluminous are prey. In this way it is possible that intraspecific competition for trophic resources in the environment is reduced. This study helps us understand the trophic ecology of L. megapoda, a frog species that plays an important role in the food web where it lives, as a predator feeding on aquatic and terrestrial organisms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 193 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Omar Murillo-Delgado ◽  
Humberto Daniel Jimenez-Torres ◽  
Jorge Israel Alvarez-Bobadilla ◽  
Jose Antonio Gutierrez-Ortega ◽  
Jessica Badillo Camacho ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Miriam Castro-Lazcarro ◽  
Valentina Davydova-Belitskaya ◽  
Abraham Cárdenas-Tristán

Lake Chapala is a natural ecosystem of Mexico, declared Ramsar site, currently, is an area with importance in the agricultural sector, tourism, and important source of drinking water in the Metropolitan area of Guadalajara, considered as a thermo regulatory body. This study used tools such as Rhtest, as well as analyzing extreme climate indices using RClimdex. In addition, the relationship with the change in water surface of Lake Chapala was assessed through the NDWI index, using Landsat images, between 1985 and 2018. According to the obtained results, the signs of climatic variability are detected in the study region, which, directly affects the basin runoff and water levels in the lake, as well as, the factor of water overexploitation in the basin, so it is considered that the lake conditions mostly depend on the type of management that is given to the resource. Finally, the results will help the understanding of climate variability and its water resources influence of the Lerma Chapala basin, which will assist in future research.


Author(s):  
Charlotte D. Smith ◽  
Kaitlyn Jackson ◽  
Hannah Peters ◽  
Susana Herrera Lima

Background: Access to safe, affordable and accessible drinking water is a human right and foundational to the third and sixth World Health Organization’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Unsafe drinking water is a risk factor for chronic and enteric diseases. Both chronic kidney disease (CKD) and diarrheal disease are highly prevalent in the Lake Chapala basin, Jalisco, Mexico, suggesting disparities in factors leading to successful achievement of these two SDGs. Methods: This study aimed to assess progress towards SDG three and six in the Lake Chapala basin. Qualitative, quantitative, and geospatial data were collected between May and August of 2019 from three towns within the municipalities of Poncitlán and Chapala. Results: Ninety-nine households participated in this study. Water sampling analyses determined 81.18% of samples from water jugs (garrafones) and 70.05% of samples from tap water were contaminated with total coliform bacteria, often including E. coli. Additionally, 32% of garrafón samples and 61.9% of tap water samples had detectable levels of arsenic. Approximately 97.94% of respondents stated that they believe clean water is a human right, but 78.57% feel the Mexican government does not do enough to make this a reality. Conclusions: This mixed methods approach highlights water quality as a serious issue in communities around Lake Chapala, and demonstrates inadequate drinking water as a key hazard, potentially perpetuating the high disease burden of both CKD and enteric disease in the region.


UVserva ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 302-312
Author(s):  
Conrado González Vera

El propósito de este trabajo es exponer algunos procesos de transformación del paisaje agrario, incluyendo la plasticultura en la ciénaga de Chapala, México. El método seguido fue: delimitar el objeto de investigación, diseñar el esquema de investigación, identificar fuentes de información, diseñar instrumentos de investigación, analizar y fichar fuentes de información, diseñar el esquema de exposición y generar la exposición de resultados. El lago de Chapala ha sido transformado por la actividad geológica y humana. A principios del siglo XX fue mutilado y transformado de nuevo por un dique artificial que fue la principal forma de desecarlo. Posteriormente, alrededor de la tercera década del siglo XX la tierra fue repartida en ejidos, sin embargo, hoy día la propiedad de la tierra se está reconcentrando en pocas manos: empresarios agrícolas y agroindustria, y transformándose una vez más debido a la revolución verde, los derivados de ésta y la plasticultura.Palabras clave: Acumulación de capital; ciénaga de Chapala; ejido; paisaje agrario; plasticultura. AbstractThe purpose of this study is to show some processes of tranformation of the agrarian landscape, including plasticulture in the swam of Lake Chapala, Mexico, known as “La Ciénaga de Chapala”. The method followed was: to delimit the research object, design the research scheme, identify sources of information, design research instruments, analyze and record information sources, design the exposure scheme and generate the results presentation. Lake Chapala has been transformed by geological and human activity. At the beginning of the 20th century it was mutilated and transformed again by an artificial dam that was the main way to dry it. Subsequently, around the third decade of the twentieth century, the land was divided into ejidos, however, today the ownership of the land is being reconcentrated in a few hands: agricultural entrepreneurs and agroindustry and being transformed once again due to the green revolution, its derivates and plasticulture.Keywords: Agrarian Landscape; Capital Accumulation; Chapala Marsh; Ejido; Plasticulture.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 87
Author(s):  
Peter Otto ◽  
Ramiro Vallejo-Rodríguez ◽  
Saskia Keesstra ◽  
Elizabeth León-Becerril ◽  
José de Anda ◽  
...  

Temporal delays and spatial randomness between ground-based data and satellite overpass involve important deviations between the empirical model output and real data; these are factors poorly considered in the model calibration. The inorganic matter-generated turbidity in Lake Chapala (Mexico) was taken as a study case to expose the influence of such factors. Ground-based data from this study and historical records were used as references. We take advantage of the at-surface reflectance from Landsat-8, sun-glint corrections, a reduced NIR-band range, and null organic matter incidence in these wavelengths to diminish the physical phenomena-related radiometric artifacts; leaving the spatio-temporal relationships as the principal factor inducing the model uncertainty. Non-linear correlations were assessed to calibrate the best empirical model; none of them presented a strong relationship (<73%), including that based on hourly delays. This last model had the best predictability only for the summer-fall season, explaining 71% of the turbidity variation in 2016, and 59% in 2017, with RMSEs < 24%. The instantaneous turbidity maps depicted the hydrodynamic complexity of the lake, highlighting a strong component of spatial randomness associated with the temporal delays. Reasonably, robust empirical models will be developed if several dates and sampling-sites are synchronized with more satellite overpasses.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
David Avalos Cueva ◽  
Cesar O. Monzón ◽  
Anatoliy Filonov ◽  
Iryna Tereshchenko ◽  
Pedro Limón Covarrubias ◽  
...  

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