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Otters as Bioindicators of Estuarine Health: Research Gaps and Future Framework

By

PaulHoule

3mo ago· 2 min readenInsight

Summary

This scientific synthesis article examines otters as bioindicators for estuarine health monitoring. It highlights how otters serve as integrative sentinels due to their reliance on clean water, diverse prey, and connected habitats, with evidence from 40 years of fieldwork in Brazil's Peri Lagoon and global studies. The article details otters' bioindicator value through habitat specificity, contaminant sensitivity, behavioral proxies, and top-down ecosystem effects. A bibliometric analysis reveals research biases favoring temperate species over tropical/estuarine otters. The authors identify persistent challenges and propose a seven-pillar framework for advancing otter-based estuarine management through interdisciplinary collaborations.

Key quotes

· 4 pulled
This synthesis highlights otters—semi-aquatic mustelids such as the Neotropical otter (Lontra longicaudis), North American river otter (Lontra canadensis), and sea otter (Enhydra lutris)—as integrative sentinels, leveraging their reliance on clean water, diverse prey, and connected habitats, plus their meso-predator roles in food webs.
Based on 40 years of Projeto Lontra fieldwork in Brazil's Peri Lagoon and global studies, we detail otters' bioindicator value: habitat specificity (e.g., 30% sighting drops in fragmented areas), contaminant sensitivity (bioaccumulation of POPs, metals, microplastics; 66% Toxoplasma positivity), behavioral proxies (spraints showing diet shifts: 70–80% fish), and top-down effects.
A Scopus bibliometric analysis (1986–2025) exposes biases: 6,300 publications dominated by temperate species (>70% on sea/Eurasian otters), with tropical/estuarine gaps (Neotropical otter: 211 documents, Brazil at 49%).
We propose a seven-pillar framework: population scaling, density studies, impact quantification, monitoring harmonization, reintroductions, socioeconomic balancing, and pathogen considerations. This promotes interdisciplinary, equitable collaborations to advance otter-based estuarine management.
Snippet from the RSS feed
Estuaries are vital ecosystems bridging terrestrial and marine environments, supporting nutrient cycling, biodiversity, and services like flood protection. Yet, they face threats from pollution, habitat fragmentation, overfishing, and climate change, dema

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