Ecological impacts of tributyltin on estuarine communities in the Hastings River, NSW Australia
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00authored byA Roach, Scott Wilson
Oyster (Saccostrea commercialis) biomonitoring, assessment of oyster and gastropod (Bembicium auratum) abundance, and gastropod imposex were used to measure the significance of tributyltin (TBT) contamination in an intertidal mangrove forest. We studied the bioavailable levels of TBT in oysters approximately 1 km downstream and 2 km upstream from a TBT waste disposal site. We found observabledeclines in the abundance of oysters and gastropods correlated with the bioavailable TBT and these findings were confirmed by mapping oyster beds. Oyster cover near the disposal site ranged from 0% to 5%while downstream and upstream populations ranged in cover from 25% to 50% and 5% to 25%, respectively.Similarly, gastropod abundances at the disposal site were only 7% of the downstream populationand 17% of the upstream population. Imposex was present in 90% of female B. auratum from populationsnear the disposal site but this effect declined more sharply than the population level effects.