0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Pollution Issues in Coastal Lagoons in the Gulf of Mexico

IntechOpen eBooks 2019 10 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alfonso V. Botello, Guadalupe de la Lanza Espino, Susana Villanueva Fragoso, Guadalupe Ponce Vélez

Summary

This review summarizes pollution threats to the many coastal lagoons along Mexico's Gulf coast, including heavy metals, pesticides, and plastics. It highlights these as rich but vulnerable ecosystems under increasing pressure from urban and industrial sources.

The coastline of the Mexican Gulf of Mexico is an area of paramount importance. It poses valuable biological and ecological resources such as coastal lagoons, rivers, estuaries, wetlands and swamps. It poses 206 coastal systems including 73 coastal lagoons with high biological richness. Their study shows the physicochemical characteristics and pollution levels into the four more productive lagoons of Tampamachoco, Mandinga, Alvarado in the Veracruz state and Terminos Lagoon in Campeche state, México, have the present characteristics. The lagoons show a wide interval in physiochemical parameters (temperature: 18–32°C, salinity: 11–38 ups, and nutrients: oxygen 1.8–9.0 mg/L, total phosphorus 2.6–123 μM total nitrogen 5–70 μM, and chlorophyll 10–50 mg/m3). All of them oscillated between normal to eutrophication condition. The presence of PAHs and some of the high toxicity as anthracene, and chrysene, as well as naphthalene and its methyl derivatives has been reported. Also, chlorinated hydrocarbons used for agriculture purposes and malaria control (DDT, lindane, endosulfan) have been identified in these lagoons. Metals as Cr, Pb, Ni, Cd, and V among others were recently reported in the lagoons considered in this study. Concentrations of pollutants also show significant variations depending on the time and the type of lagoon, or estuary.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastic contamination in three environmental compartments of a coastal lagoon in the southern Gulf of Mexico

Researchers documented microplastic contamination in water, sediment, and tiny marine animals in a protected lagoon in Mexico's Gulf coast. Even though the site has protected status, microplastics were found in all three environmental compartments, with polyester and acrylic fibers being the most common types. The study shows that even remote, protected waterways are not immune to microplastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Evaluation of Water Quality and the Potential Ecological and Health Risk in the Cajititlán Lagoon

Not relevant to microplastics — this ecological study tracks physicochemical water quality parameters and heavy metal concentrations in a Mexican lagoon over 14 years to assess ecosystem health and human health risk, with no focus on plastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Coastal lagoons of West Africa: a scoping study of environmental status and management challenges

This review examines the environmental status of 31 coastal lagoons across West Africa, finding that waste pollution, overuse of resources, and urban expansion are major threats to these ecosystems. Plastic pollution, including microplastics, is among the identified pressures degrading water quality and harming both aquatic life and the human communities that depend on these lagoons. The study highlights significant knowledge gaps about waste management and pollution levels in this region.

Article Tier 2

Impact of Microplastic in Mexican Coastal Areas Using Mussels (Mytilus spp.) as Biomonitors

Mussels (Mytilus spp.) collected along Mexican coastal sites were used as biomonitors for microplastic contamination, with plastic particles found across sampling locations and associated with elevated concentrations of adsorbed heavy metals.

Article Tier 2

Environmental risk of microplastics in a Mexican coastal lagoon ecosystem: Anthropogenic inputs and its possible human food risk

Researchers found extremely high microplastic concentrations in a Mexican coastal lagoon, with levels hundreds of thousands of times above those in other protected areas. Fishing and urban activities were the main sources, contributing polyethylene and PET fragments. The study estimated that a single serving of locally harvested oysters could expose a person to over 800 microplastic particles.

Share this paper