Daphnia need to be gut-cleared too: the effect of exposure to and ingestion of metal-contaminated sediment on the gut-clearance patterns of D. magna
The presence of sediment particles in the gut indicated that Daphnia magna used in whole-sediment bioassays ingest sediment. If gut contents are not removed prior to whole-body tissue-burden analysis, then the bioavailability of any sediment-associated contaminants (e.g. metals) can be overestimated...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Aquatic toxicology 2005-01, Vol.71 (2), p.143-154 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The presence of sediment particles in the gut indicated that
Daphnia magna used in whole-sediment bioassays ingest sediment. If gut contents are not removed prior to whole-body tissue-burden analysis, then the bioavailability of any sediment-associated contaminants (e.g. metals) can be overestimated. Gut clearing patterns were determined for
D. magna after exposure to both clean and metal-contaminated (Cu and Zn) field-collected sediments.
D. magna exposed to reference sediment had fuller guts than those exposed to metal-contaminated sediment (95% versus 60% full). Neither reference- nor metal-exposed
D. magna could clear their gut completely of sediment particles when held in clean water for 24
h. When
Daphnia were transferred to clean water after exposure to metal-contaminated sediment, there was no significant decrease in gut-fullness (
P
>
0.05) even after 48
h of purging. By comparison, animals transferred to water containing 5
×
10
5 cells of algae (
Pseudokircheriella subcapita) after exposure to contaminated sediment showed a significant drop in gut fullness from 56% immediately after exposure to 17% after 4
h of gut-clearance. Although gut fullness did not change significantly beyond 2
h of purging, data were much less variable after 8
h of gut-clearance than after 2
h or 4
h. The depuration of Cu was well described with a two-compartment first-order kinetic model (
r
2
=
0.78,
P
<
0.0001) indicating that
D. magna exposed to metal-contaminated sediment have one pool of Cu that is quickly depurated (0.2
h
−1), and one that has been incorporated into the tissues (≪0.00001
h
−1). Assuming tissue background of 48
μg/g, an exposed animal which has not been depurated or which has been purged with water alone would yield whole-body tissue Cu concentrations that are 5.6- and 4-fold higher, respectively, than that purged with algae
+
water (8
h). We recommend that
D. magna used to estimate metal bioavailability from sediment be gut-cleared in the presence of algae for 8
h prior to determination of whole-body metal concentrations. |
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ISSN: | 0166-445X 1879-1514 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.aquatox.2004.10.016 |