Bioindicators
What’s a bioindicator?
Bioindicators are organisms (or parts of organisms or communities of organisms) that contain information on quality of the environment (or a part of the environment).
This species can be used in biomonitoring contaminant exposure. In order to evaluate how contamination exists spatially, sessile species are the best. In addition, a good bioindicator species is common and easily sampled, presenting some responses to toxicants (biomarker responses) that can be reliably measured and show concentration dependence.
Bioindicators can inform us also about the biological and ecological integrity of an environment. This is the ability to maintain communities balanced, adaptable and integrated organisms, possessing a species composition, diversity and functional organization comparable to a natural environment and reflect natural evolutionary processes.
Another important use of bioindicators is the perform of bioassays. For more detailed explanation of bioassays please check this wiki page.
You can also follow along and get updates on new resources by subscribing to the bioindicators tag
Mainly used bioindicators
Bioindicators for water
For study of freshwater quality, the main group used is the macroinvertebrates. Between the most common bioindicators of good water quality we have the mayfly midges, and for polluted waters blood worms midges. These particular species have several advantages over: they are sedentary, with short life spans, are easy and cheap for sampling, and there are several methods for data analysis (biotic indexes and diversity indexes).
Bioindicators for air
For study of air quality, the main group used is the lichens. These bioindicators differ in their pollution sensitivity. You can find out more in the @vaniafong research note. These particular species have several advantages over: they are ubiquitous, they do not have a protective cuticle and absorb, if either symbiote is affected for something, both organisms die, they are relatively long-lived, they are perennial, have restricted ecological requirements or limited dispersion ranges.
Bioindicators for soil
For study of soil quality, one important group used is the plants. Between the most common plants of soil quality we have the cloudberry (Rubus chamaemorus), crowberry (Empetrum nigrum), onion (Allium cepa), Tradescantia sp., Vicia faba, among others. These particular species have several advantages over: do not move, depend directly on the soil to fulfill their vital functions, have specific requirements (acidophilic, basophilic, hydrophilic, nitrophilic, sciophilic, heliophilic plants, etc.), indicators of many characteristics of the environment such as metals in the soil, acidity in the soil and in the rain, climatic changes, human intervention, livestock pressure.
Questions
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Research notes
Wikis
Title | Updated | Version | Views | Likes | |
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Lichen for Air Quality Biomonitoring | about 2 years ago by fongvania | 12 | 264 | 1 | |
Bioindicators | almost 3 years ago by fongvania | 6 | 536 | 2 |
Activities
Purpose | Category | Status | Author | Time | Difficulty | Replications |
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Activity: Learning to Spot Lichens and Mosses | observe | - | @fongvania | 1h | easy | 0 replications: Try it » |
¿Cómo evaluar la calidad de un río con insectos acuáticos (bioindicadores)? / How do I assess the quality of an river with aquatic insects (bioindicators)? | - | - | @alejobonifacio | - | - | 0 replications: Try it » |
Activity: Air Pollution Gardens | - | - | @fongvania | - | - | 0 replications: Try it » |
Activity: Lichens for Qualitative Air Quality Determination | observe | - | @fongvania | - | easy | 0 replications: Try it » |
Activities should include a materials list, costs and a step-by-step guide to construction with photos. Learn what makes a good activity here.
Published articles
- Markert, Prof. Dr. Bernd & Breure, Anton & Zechmeister, Harald. (2003). Bioindicators and Biomonitors: Principles, Concepts and Applications. Trace Metals and Other Contaminants in the Environment. 6. 15-25. LINK to the full text.
- Vinet, L., & Zhedanov, A. (2010). Bioindicators & Biomonitors Principles, Concepts and Applications. In Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling (Vol. 53, Issue 9). https://doi.org/10.1088/1751-8113/44/8/085201 LINK to the abstract.
- Bhaduri, D., Chatterjee, D., Chakraborty, K., Chatterjee, S., & Saha, A. (2018). Bioindicators of Degraded Soils (pp. 231–257). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99076-7_8 LINK to the abstrac.