Seaweeds are well known to concentrate metals from seawater and have been
employed as monitors of metal pollution in coastal waters and estuaries.
However, research showing that various intrinsic and extrinsic factors can
influence metal accumulation, raises doubts about the basis for using seaweeds
in biomonitoring programmes. The thallus of brown seaweeds of the order
Laminariales (kelps) is morphologically complex but there is limited
information about the variation in metal accumulation between the different
parts, which might result in erroneous conclusions being drawn if not accounted
for in the biomonitoring protocol. To assess patterns of individual metals in
the differentiated parts of the thallus (blade, stipe, holdfast),
concentrations of a wide range of essential and non-essential metals (Fe, Cr,
Cu, Zn, Mn, Pb, Cd, Ni and Al) were measured in the kelp Lessonia trabeculata.
Seaweeds were collected from three sampling stations located at 5, 30 and 60 m
from an illegal sewage outfall close to Ventanas, Chile and from a pristine
location at Faro Curaumilla. For the majority of metals the highest
concentrations in bottom sediment and seaweed samples were found at the site
closest to the outfall, with concentrations decreasing with distance from the
outfall and at control stations; the exception was Cd, concentrations of which
were higher at control stations. The patterns of metal concentrations in
different thallus parts were metal specific and independent of sampling
station. These results and the available literature suggest that biomonitoring
of metals using seaweeds must take account of differences in the accumulation
of metals in thallus parts of complex seaweedsComment: Research articl