Investigating the quality of European silver eels by quantifying contaminants and parasite infestation in a French Mediterranean lagoon complex
- PMID: 39862372
- DOI: 10.1007/s11356-024-35815-0
Investigating the quality of European silver eels by quantifying contaminants and parasite infestation in a French Mediterranean lagoon complex
Abstract
Coastal lagoons are diverse habitats with significant ecological gradients, which provide crucial ecosystem services but face threats from human activities such as invasive species and pollution. Among the species inhabiting the lagoons, the critically endangered European eel (Anguilla anguilla) is an emblematic species strongly impacted by contamination and parasitism. Several indicators were developed to assess the quality of eel at a large geographic scale. Most indicators are based on the concentration of individual pollutant and/or abundance of parasites separately without considering individual variations. This study assessed the quality of 59 eels captured at three different sites inside a Mediterranean lagoon complex (the Camargue, South of France), by integrating multiple degradation factors (POPs, TEs, and A. crassus infestation) and considering individual eel characteristics (length, age, growth rate, and sex). Using multivariate TOPSIS analysis including these degradation factors, this study found that eel quality decreased with age but did not significantly vary between sites. When focusing on each degradation factor, A. crassus infestation rates were lower in older eels, independently to the site; however, the POPs and TEs contaminations were lower in the Grandes Cabanes site compared to the Vaccarès and Fumemorte sites even if smaller and younger eels were more contaminated by POPs. These findings reveal the fine-scale spatial variability in eel quality, with TOPSIS analysis providing a robust method to rank and score scenarios. This approach enhances the understanding of habitat degradation sources affecting eel contamination and parasitic infestation, supporting more effective strategies for sustainable habitat management.
Keywords: Anguilla anguilla; Anguillicola crassus; Contamination; Mediterranean lagoon; Persistent organic pollutants; Spawner quality; Trace elements.
© 2025. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
Conflict of interest statement
Declarations. Ethical approval: The treatment of animals is in accordance with the laws, guidelines, and animal welfare policies of the CE71 Ethics Committee. The Tour du Valat and its staff are authorised to carry out experiments on wild animals (French authorisation number A 13 200 01). Consent to participate: Not applicable. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests.
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