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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Kinetic determinations of trace element bioaccumulation in the mussel, Mytilus edulis

TLDR
Sensitivity analysis indicated that the total suspended solids load, which can affect mussel feeding activity, assimilation, and trace element concentration in the dissolved and particulate phases, can significantly influence metal bioaccumulation for particlereactive elements such as Ag and Am.
Abstract
Laboratory experiments employing radiotracer methodology were conducted to determine the assimilation efficiencies from ingested natural seston, the influx rates from the dissolved phase and the efflux rates of 6 trace elements (Ag, Am, Cd, Co. Se and Zn) in the mussel Mytilus edulis. A kinetic model was then employed to predict trace element concentration in mussel tissues in 2 locations for which mussel and environmental data are well described: South San Francisco Bay (California, USA) and Long Island Sound [New York, USA). Assimilation efficiencies from natural seston ranged from 5 to 18": for Ag, 0.6 to 1% for Am, 8 to 20% for Cd, 12 to 16% for CO, 28 to 34% for Se, and 32 to 41 ':, for Zn. Differences in chlorophyll a concentration in ingested natural seston did not have significant impact on the assimilation of Am, CO, Se and Zn. The influx rate of elements from the dissolved phase increased with the dissolved concentration, conforming to Freundlich adsorption isotherms. The calculated dissolved uptake rate constant was greatest for Ag, followed by Zn > Am -; Cd > CO > Se. The estimated absorption efficiency from the d~ssolved phase was 1.53 % for Ag, 0.34 % for Am, 0.31 X for Cd, 0.11 % for CO, 0.03"' for Se and 0.89% for Zn. Salinity had an inverse effect on the influx rate from the dissolved phase and dissolved organic carbon concentration had no significant effect on trace element uptake. The calculated efflux rate constants for all elements ranged from 1.0 to 3.0% d-' The route of trace element uptake (food vs dissolved) and the duration of exposure to dissolved trace elements (12 h vs 6 d) did not significantly influence trace element efflux rates. A model which used the experimentally determined influx and efflux rates for each of the trace elements, following exposure from ingested food and from water, predicted concentrations of Ag. Cd, Se and Zn in mussels that were directly comparable to actual tissue concentrations independently measured in the 2 reference sites in national monitoring programs. Sensitivity analysis indicated that the total suspended solids load, which can affect mussel feeding activity, assimilation, and trace element concentration in the dissolved and particulate phases, can significantly influence metal bioaccumulation for particlereactive elements such as Ag and Am. For all metals, concentrations in mussels are proportionately related to total metal load in the water column and their assimilation efficiency from ingested particles. Further, the model predicted that over 96% of Se in mussels is obtained from ingested food, under conditions typical of coastal waters. For Ag, Am, Cd, CO and Zn, the relative contribution from the dissolved phase decreases significantly with increasing trace element parhtion coefficients for suspended particles and the assimilation efficiency in mussels of ingested trace elements, values range between 33 and 67% for Ag, 5 and 1 7 % for Am, 47 and 82% for Cd, 4 and 30% for CO, and 17 and 51 ?h for Zn.

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Silver nanoparticles: behaviour and effects in the aquatic environment.

TL;DR: The ecotoxicological literature shows that concentrations of Ag NPs below the current and future PECs, as low as just a few ng L(-1), can affect prokaryotes, invertebrates and fish indicating a significant potential, though poorly characterised, risk to the environment.
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Why Is Metal Bioaccumulation So Variable? Biodynamics as a Unifying Concept

TL;DR: It is suggested that a biologically based conceptualization, the biodynamic model, provides the necessary unification for a key aspect in risk: metal bioaccumulation (internal exposure).
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Trace metal bioaccumulation: models, metabolic availability and toxicity.

TL;DR: The biodynamic model of trace metal bioaccumulation allows the prediction and explanation of widely differing accumulated trace metal concentrations in organisms, combining geochemical analyses of environmental metal concentrations with the measurement of key physiological parameters for a species from the site under consideration.
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Framework for metals risk assessment.

TL;DR: The Framework for Metals Risk Assessment is a science-based document that describes basic principles that address the special attributes and behaviors of metals and metal compounds to be considered when assessing their human health and ecological risks.
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Subcellular compartmentalization of Cd and Zn in two bivalves. I. Significance of metal-sensitive fractions (MSF) and biologically detoxified metal (BDM)

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that progressive retention of metal as BDM (i.e. MRG) with age may lead to size dependency of metal concentrations often observed in some populations of M. balthica.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Technical basis for establishing sediment quality criteria for nonionic organic chemicals using equilibrium partitioning

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the technical basis for establishing sediment quality criteria using equilibrium partitioning (EqP), which is chosen because it addresses the two principal technical issues that must be resolved: the varying bioavailability of chemicals in sediments and the choice of the appropriate biological effects concentration.
Journal ArticleDOI

The replacement of the nondescript term ‘heavy metals’ by a biologically and chemically significant classification of metal ions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a classification of metal ions according to their binding preferences (i.e. whether they seek out O-, N- or S-containing ligands).
Journal ArticleDOI

The equilibrium speciation of dissolved components in freshwater and sea water at 25°C and 1 atm pressure

TL;DR: In this paper, a data base summarising the stability constants of more than 500 complexes is used to calculate speciation pictures for 58 trace elements in model seawater (pH 8.2) and freshwaters (PH 6 and 9).
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationships between seston, available food and feeding activity in the common mussel Mytilus edulis

J. Widdows, +2 more
- 01 Sep 1979 - 
TL;DR: The feeding and metabolic rates of Mytilus edulis L.Edulis of different body sizes were measured in response to changes in particle concentrations ranging from 2 to 350 mg l-1, and the particulate carbohydrate, protein and lipid content provided an estimate of the food content of the seston.
Journal ArticleDOI

The common mussel Mytilus edulis as an indicator of pollution by zinc, cadmium, lead and copper. I. Effects of environmental variables on uptake of metals

TL;DR: The net uptake of copper by the mussel was extremely erratic, and was affected by salinity and temperature changes and by the presence of the other metals and changes in their relative concentrations, it is suggested that the mussels should not be used as an indicator of copper in the marine environment.
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