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BIOACUMAR. Environmental risk assessment due to bioaccumulation of antibiotics and synthetic hormones in marine ecosystems to strengthen fisheries and aquaculture sustainability, food security and ecosystem health (One Health).

Pleamar program

Antibiotics and synthetic hormones are emerging pollutants that can accumulate and biomagnify in the marine food chain, with potential implications for ecosystem health and food security associated with fishery and aquaculture products.

BIOACUMAR will evaluate its presence on the Asturian and Andalusian coasts using as bioindicators two species of fishing interest, sea bass (farmed and wild) and dogfish, as well as the bottlenose dolphin, a sentinel species of high environmental value. In these species, residues of antibiotics and synthetic hormones will be analysed, together with resistant bacteria, selecting the compounds according to their predominance of use (human, livestock or aquaculture).

This approach will make it possible to estimate the relative contribution of different activities to marine pollution, in addition to assessing the environmental and health risk from a One Health perspective, providing useful information for the sustainable management of fisheries, aquaculture and marine protected areas.

INTEMARES complementary project.

The following entities act as collaborating entities: General Directorate of Maritime Fisheries. Ministry of Rural Affairs and Agricultural Policy of the Principality of Asturias, University Institute of Animal Health and Food Safety (IUSA) of the University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (ULPGC) and Marine Animal Rescue (Asturias).

Line of action:

Marine ecosystems

Status:

En ejecución

Location

Andalusia and Asturias

Research line

Axis 7. Knowledge of the Marine Environment

Execution date:

2026

End date:

2028

Project web page:

https://www.programapleamar.es/proyectos/bioacumar-evaluacion-del-riesgo-ambiental-por-bioacumulacion-de-antibioticos-y-hormonas

The general objective of the project is to evaluate the bioaccumulation of emerging pollutants of high risk to the health of marine ecosystems in the North Atlantic, South Atlantic and Strait of Alboran Sea demarcations, through the analysis of synthetic hormones, antibiotic residues and resistant bacteria in bioindicator species of different trophic levels and residence patterns. to estimate the environmental risk of major anthropogenic pressures, improve food security and strengthen aquaculture sustainability.

Specific objectives:

OE.1: To collect and characterise the biological samples of the target species of the project: sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax), dogfish (Galeorhinus galeus) and bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus).
OE.2: To analyse the concentrations of antibiotic residues (authorised in aquaculture) and synthetic hormones (commonly used in human medicine) in the target species of the project.
OE.3: To evaluate the presence of bacteria resistant to selected antibiotics in fish, through microbiological analysis, and to characterize antibiotic resistance genes and microbial communities in water samples, using metagenomic techniques.
OE.4: To analyze the population genetic differentiation of the specimens studied and the sex in the case of bottlenose dolphins to contextualize the bioaccumulation results according to origin, geographical distribution and population structure.
OE.5: To comparatively assess the levels of bioaccumulation of pollutants between species and marine demarcations (North Atlantic, South Atlantic and Strait and Alboran), including aquaculture farms and marine areas of the Natura 2000 Network present in these demarcations.
OE.6: Infer the possible sources of contamination associated with the residues of antibiotics and synthetic hormones detected, analysing the profiles of compounds according to their predominant sector of use (human, livestock or aquaculture) and their frequency of application according to geographical area.
OE.7: Assess the state of health of the marine ecosystems under study with a One Health approach, considering the environmental risk derived from emerging pollutants and the health of bottlenose dolphin populations as a bioindicator species, with special attention to the areas of aquaculture influence and the priority areas for the assessment of the risk of discharges from land-based sources identified in the Marine Strategies, providing criteria for integrated management, environmental sustainability of ecosystems and fishing and aquaculture activities and the strengthening of ecosystem resilience.
OE.8: Transfer of knowledge on the conservation of the coastal and marine environment with a One Health approach, through the delivery of training workshops structured in three thematic blocks: chemical pollution, assessment of the marine environmental status and sustainability of fisheries and aquaculture.

University of León

University of Cadiz

CIRCE (Conservation, Information and Study on Cetaceans)

programa
linea de actuación

BIOACUMAR. Environmental risk assessment due to bioaccumulation of antibiotics and synthetic hormones in marine ecosystems to strengthen fisheries and aquaculture sustainability, food security and ecosystem health (One Health).