Accumulation rates of cadmium, the amount of food ingested and assimilated, the amount of oxygen consumed and changes in dry flesh weight have been measured in Mytilus eduIis L. exposed to 0, 10 and 100 ppb cadmium for 17 d in aquaria with seawater flowing continuously and at constant algal concentr
Accumulation of cadmium in the musselMytilus edulis:kinetics and importance of uptake via food and sea water
✍ Scribed by H. U. Riisgård; E. Bjørnestad; F. Møhlenberg
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 463 KB
- Volume
- 96
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0025-3162
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✦ Synopsis
In a short-term (162 h) accumulation experiment with mussels Mytilus edulis exposed to 100 ppb Cd and fed algal cells (Phaeodactylum tricornutum) in 1986, it was found that uptake via food played an insignificant role compared to direct uptake from ambient water (19%0 S). From measurements of the filtration rate and Cd uptake rate, it was estimated that the fraction of Cd taken up per liter of water filtered was about 0.15%. The initial uptake of Cd was linear with time and about three times higher in fed than in starved mussels. From the measured uptake of Cd in starved mussels collected in 1982 and exposed to 10, 100 and 200 ppb in long-term experiments (up to 242 d), it was found that the Cd accumulation rate was not linear with time, and that the Cd uptake was not directly proportional with the exposure concentration. Values as high as 100 to 1 300 ppm Cd (dry wt of soft parts) were measured. It was found that the Cd elimination rate was not directly proportional with the Cd body burden in long-term exposed mussels, thus indicating that a certain fraction of Cd may have been immobilized to metallothioneins.
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