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Screening for cyanobacterial hepatotoxins in herring and salmon from the Baltic Sea
Sipiä, V.; Lahti, K.; Kankaanpää, H.; Vuorinen, P.J.; Meriluoto, J. (2002). Screening for cyanobacterial hepatotoxins in herring and salmon from the Baltic Sea. Aquat. Ecosyst. Health Manag. 5(4): 451-456
In: Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management. Taylor and Francis: Oxford. ISSN 1463-4988; e-ISSN 1539-4077, more
Related to:
Sipiä, V. (2001). Accumulation of cyanobacterial hepatotoxins and okadaic acid in mussel and fish tissues from the Baltic Sea. Finnish Institute of Marine Research Contributions, 3. Finnish Institute of Marine Research: Helsinki. 51 pp., more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Sipiä, V.
  • Lahti, K.
  • Kankaanpää, H.
  • Vuorinen, P.J.
  • Meriluoto, J.

Abstract
    Nodularin, a cyclic pentapeptide hepatotoxin closely related to microcystins, is produced by the toxic brackish water cyanobacterium Nodularia spumigena which regularly forms blooms in the Baltic Sea. Baltic herring (Clupea harengus membras L.) and salmon (Salmo salar L.) were caught in the Baltic Sea during 1997 to assess levels of nodularin and microcystins resulting from the blooms. The total toxin content in herring muscle and salmon liver was measured with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Despite exceptionally heavy blooms of toxic Nodularia in the Baltic Sea during the summer of 1997, Baltic herring and salmon contained very low quantities of nodularin and microcystins (2.5-6.5 ng g-1 dry weight, not corrected for recovery, [30%]). These concentrations do not pose a health threat to humans, based on the World Health Organization value of tolerable daily intake. Moreover, the concentrations we found in salmon and herring were much lower than those reported for livers of European flounder (Platichthys flesus L.) or Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.) from the Baltic Sea during 1996-1999. We suspect that cyanobacterial hepatotoxins do not effectively accumulate in herring and salmon.

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