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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brandts, Irene, Omedes, Sergi, Gilardoni, Carmen, Balcells, Marc, Solé, Montserrat, Galimany, Eve
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI 2025
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41514702/
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Table of Contents:
  • Characterizing the Health Status of European Hake () in Areas with Different Anthropic Impacts (NW Mediterranean Sea). Brandts, Irene Omedes, Sergi Gilardoni, Carmen Balcells, Marc Solé, Montserrat Galimany, Eve The high incidence of anthropogenic impacts in the Mediterranean basin raises concerns on the health and quality of commercial fish species. This study aims to evaluate the health status of the European hake, , from three areas of the Catalan coast (NW Mediterranean Sea) with different anthropogenic impacts (i.e., chemical pollution, litter, …) and assess if hake could serve as a sentinel species. We measured biomarkers of chemical exposure including B-esterases, antioxidant enzymes (GST, GR, GPx, CAT), biotransformation markers (EROD), lipid peroxidation, and macro-parasite assemblages. Hake showed, generally, a good health status across all areas with homogeneous patterns for most parameters. Tissue-specific differences included elevated gonadal cholinesterases and higher brain and hepatic carboxylesterase activities in the south, and increased hepatic EROD but lower lipid peroxidation in the central Barcelona area. Parasite assemblages were dominated by Digenea, Cestoda, and Nematoda, with higher cestode prevalence in both central and south zones. In summary, despite a greater prevalence of environmental pollution in the central region, there was a homogeneous pattern in hake health indicators throughout the three studied fishing zones. These results establish a baseline for hake health in Mediterranean waters and suggest that the species' high mobility and wide depth range may limit its utility to detect local-scale pollution impacts, though it may serve as a regional-scale bioindicator.