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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Pufferfish are some of the most poisonous marine organisms due to their capability to accumulate
potent neurotoxins such as tetrodotoxins (TTXs) and paralytic shellfish toxins (PSTs). Several species
are consumed, mainly in Asiatic countries, for the quality of their flesh, which may cause severe human
poisoning every year due to errors in preparation. Lagocephalus lagocephalus the oceanic pufferfish, is
a cosmopolitan species present in European Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts. Although considered
toxic, only a few studies have previously addressed the occurrence of toxic compounds in this species.
In the present study, 29 individuals of L. lagocephalus caught in Madeira Island (NE Atlantic) were
dissected and analysed by HPLC-FLD for PSTs detection. Saxitoxin (STX) and decarbamoyl STX (dcSTX)
were detected in liver, intestine and gonads but not in the muscle. Neosaxitoxin (NEO) could also be
detected in a liver sample. The total STX equivalent (eq) concentrations in liver ranged from < LOQ to
973.4 μg STX eq kg−1. The presence of toxins in the intestines and gonads points to the fish capability
to acquire toxins through feeding or by association with endosymbiotic, toxin-producing microbes
as well as the ability to accumulate them in specific organs. Although pufferfish trade in Europe is
forbidden by European Union regulations, the increasing occurrence of this species in new areas and
the expected raise of blooms of PSTs-producer organisms claims for a better knowledge on oceanic
pufferfish toxicity and biology. This will be needed to provide accurate information to stakeholders
and population to prevent illegal trade of these species and poisoning incidents.
Description
Keywords
Paralytic shellfish toxins Pufferfish Dinoflagellate Cyanobacteria Tetrodotoxin
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier