Copper Level in Fish, Selected Fresh and Marine Aquatic Ecosystems in Nigeria

Authors

  • O.K. Adeyemo Author
  • O.T. Akomolafe Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4314/

Keywords:

Copper, Water pollution, Marine, Freshwater, Fish, Nigeria

Abstract

 Fish have been valued as excellent indicators of water quality because they integrate all the stresses placed 
on the aquatic ecosystem. This study was conducted to investigate the level of copper in selected Freshwater (Awba Dam, 
Asejire and Eleyele rivers), Marine waters (Lekki Lagoon and Victoria Island Ocean) and fishes that live in these 
ecosystems in Nigeria. Upstream and downstream samples of water and fish were collected monthly for a period of five 
months. The results obtained shows that the level of copper in fresh water was non-significantly (p=0.39) higher (1.1mg/l) 
than that of marine water (0.8 mg/l) at 95% confidence limit. The concentration of Cu in fish was a reverse relation since 
marine fish accumulated a higher (5.2mg/kg) copper relative to freshwater fish (4.27mg/kg). The difference in values was 
also not significant (p>0.05). The Bio-concentration factors was significantly (p<0.05) higher in the marine environment 
(6.4) relative to freshwater (4.2). This study suggests that the monitoring of Nigerian marine and freshwater for copper and 
other heavy metals is important to protect human health.

Published

2024-09-15

Issue

Section

Original Article

How to Cite

Copper Level in Fish, Selected Fresh and Marine Aquatic Ecosystems in Nigeria. (2024). African Journal of Biomedical Research, 14(2), 105-111. https://doi.org/10.4314/