Departamento de Geología, División de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Sonora, Rosales y Encinas, Centro, Hermosillo, 83000, Sonora, Mexico.
Departamento de Geología, División de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Sonora, Rosales y Encinas, Centro, Hermosillo, 83000, Sonora, Mexico.
Chemosphere. 2024 Sep;363:142881. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2024.142881. Epub 2024 Jul 18.
This work explores the efficiency of honey bees (Apis mellifera) as biosamplers of metal pollution. To understand this, we selected two cities with different urbanization (a medium-sized city and a megacity), and we collected urban dust and honey bees captured during flight. We sampled two villages and a university campus as control areas. The metal content in dust was analyzed by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) and Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) were used to investigate the shape and size distribution of the particles, and to characterize the semiquantitative chemical composition of particles adhered to honey bee's wings. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) shows a distinctive urban dust geochemical signature for each city, with component 1 defining V-Cr-Ni-Tl-Pt-Pb-Sb as characteristic of Mexico City and Ce-As-Zr for dust from Hermosillo. Particle count using SEM indicates that 69% and 63.4% of the resuspended dust from Hermosillo and Mexico City, respectively, corresponds to PM. Instead, the particle count measured on the honey bee wings from Hermosillo and Mexico City is mainly PM, 91.4% and 88.9%, respectively. The wings from honey bees collected in the villages and the university campus show much lower particle amounts. AFM-histograms confirmed that the particles identified in Mexico City have even smaller sizes (between 60 and 480 nm) than those in Hermosillo (between 400 and 1400 nm). Particles enriched in As, Zr, and Ce mixed with geogenic elements such as Si, Ca, Mg, K, and Na dominate honey bee' wings collected in Hermosillo. In contrast, those particles collected from Mexico City contain V, Cr, Ni, Tl, Pt, Pb, and Sb. Such results agree with the urban dust data. This work shows that honey bees are suitable biosamplers for the characterization of fine dust fractions by microscopy techniques and reflect the urban pollution of the sites.
这项工作探讨了蜜蜂(Apis mellifera)作为金属污染生物采样器的效率。为了了解这一点,我们选择了两个城市化程度不同的城市(一个中等城市和一个特大城市),并收集了城市灰尘和飞行中的蜜蜂。我们还采样了两个村庄和一个大学校园作为对照区。使用电感耦合等离子体质谱法(ICP-MS)分析灰尘中的金属含量。原子力显微镜(AFM)和扫描电子显微镜(SEM)用于研究颗粒的形状和尺寸分布,并对附着在蜜蜂翅膀上的颗粒的半定量化学成分进行了表征。主成分分析(PCA)显示每个城市的城市灰尘地球化学特征明显,第一主成分定义为 V-Cr-Ni-Tl-Pt-Pb-Sb 是墨西哥城的特征,第二主成分为 Ce-As-Zr 是 Hermosillo 的特征。SEM 测量的颗粒计数表明,分别有 69%和 63.4%的 Hermosillo 和墨西哥城的再悬浮灰尘对应于 PM。相比之下,从 Hermosillo 和墨西哥城采集的蜜蜂翅膀上的颗粒计数主要是 PM,分别为 91.4%和 88.9%。从村庄和大学校园采集的蜜蜂翅膀上的颗粒数量要低得多。AFM-直方图证实,在墨西哥城识别出的颗粒比 Hermosillo 的颗粒(400-1400nm)还要小(60-480nm)。富含 As、Zr 和 Ce 的颗粒与 Si、Ca、Mg、K 和 Na 等地质元素混合,是 Hermosillo 蜜蜂翅膀上的主要颗粒。相比之下,那些从墨西哥城采集的颗粒含有 V、Cr、Ni、Tl、Pt、Pb 和 Sb。这些结果与城市灰尘数据一致。这项工作表明,蜜蜂是通过显微镜技术对细粉尘进行特征分析的合适生物采样器,反映了采样点的城市污染。