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Journal ArticleDOI

Bioaccumulation kinetics and organ distribution of cadmium and zinc in the freshwater decapod crustacean Macrobrachium australiense.

TLDR
Cadmium uptake was localized within the gills and hepatopancreas, while zinc accumulated in the antennal gland at concentrations orders of magnitude greater than in other organs, suggesting that M. australiense may process zinc much faster than cadmium by internally transporting the accumulated zinc to the antenNal gland.
Abstract
This study used the radioisotopes (109)Cd and (65)Zn to explore the uptake, retention and organ distribution of these nonessential and essential metals from solution by the freshwater decapod crustacean Macrobrachium australiense. Three treatments consisting of cadmium alone, zinc alone, and a mixture of cadmium and zinc were used to determine the differences in uptake and efflux rates of each metal individually and in the metal mixture over a three-week period, followed by depuration for 2 weeks in metal-free water using live-animal gamma-spectrometry. Following exposure, prawns were cryosectioned and the spatial distribution of radionuclides visualized using autoradiography. Metal uptake and efflux rates were the same in the individual and mixed-metal exposures, and efflux rates were close to zero. The majority of cadmium uptake was localized within the gills and hepatopancreas, while zinc accumulated in the antennal gland at concentrations orders of magnitude greater than in other organs. This suggested that M. australiense may process zinc much faster than cadmium by internally transporting the accumulated zinc to the antennal gland. The combination of uptake studies and autoradiography greatly increases our understanding of how metal transport kinetics and internal processing may influence the toxicity of essential and nonessential metals in the environment.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Bioaccumulation kinetics and internal distribution of the fission products radiocaesium and radiostrontium in an estuarine crab

TL;DR: New data on crab, as a representative invertebrate, improves understanding of the impacts of planned or accidental releases of fission radionuclides on marine ecology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring New Frontiers in Marine Radioisotope Tracing – Adapting to New Opportunities and Challenges

TL;DR: In this article, the authors summarise the historical use of radiotracers in these systems, describes how existing techniques of radioecological tracing can be developed for specific current environmental issues and provides information on emerging issues that would benefit from current and new radio-ecological tracers.
Journal ArticleDOI

The toxicity and uptake of as, Cr and Zn in a stygobitic syncarid (Syncarida: Bathynellidae)

TL;DR: In this article, an undescribed syncarid (Malacostraca: Syncarida: Bathynellidae) was assessed to common groundwater contaminants, arsenic(III), chromium(VI) and zinc, and examined the bioaccumulation of As and Zn in these animals after 14-day exposure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cadmium Accumulation in Periphyton from an Abandoned Mining District in the Buffalo National River, Arkansas.

TL;DR: The results indicate increased metal concentrations in algal communities from mined areas, as periphyton is the base of the aquatic food chain, it acts as a conduit for movement of cadmium in the food web.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organ-specific accumulation of cadmium and zinc in Gammarus fossarum exposed to environmentally relevant metal concentrations.

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compared the organ-specific metal accumulation of a non-essential (Cd) and an essential metal (Zn), at their environmentally relevant exposure concentrations, in the gammarid Gammarus fossarum.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Aquatic insects and trace metals: bioavailability, bioaccumulation, and toxicity.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of heavy-metal sequestration and detoxification in crustaceans: a review

TL;DR: The focus of this review is the decapod hepatopancreas and its complement of metallothioneins, membrane metal transport proteins, and vacuolar sequestration mechanisms, although comparative remarks about potential detoxifying roles of gills, integument, and kidneys are included.
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This suggested that M. australiense may process zinc much faster than cadmium by internally transporting the accumulated zinc to the antennal gland.