Metal bioaccumulation in Persian sturgeon after sublethal exposure

Authors

  • A. Esmaili Sari Department of Environment, Natural Resources and Marine Science Faculty, Tarbiat Modares University, Noor, Iran
  • A. Mashinchian Moradi Department of Marine Biology, Faculty of Marine Science and Technology, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran
  • F. Shariati Department of Marine Biology, Faculty of Marine Science and Technology, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran
  • M. Pourkazemi International Sturgeon Research Institute, Rasht, Guilan, Iran
Abstract:

Tissue metal accumulations (gills, liver, kidney and muscle) in Persian sturgeon (Acipenser persicus) were compared folowing exposure to sublethal levels of waterborne Cd (50, 400 and 1000 μg•L-1) after periods of 1, 2, 4 and 14 days. The obtained results indicate that at the end of 4 and 14 days of exposure, total tissue cadmium concentration followed the pattern: liver > gill > kidney > muscle. Calculation of bioconcentration factor (BCF) after 14 days exposure showed that at low and high concentrations, highest BCFs were found in kidney and liver, respectively. According to the results, the accumulation capacity of muscle was the lowest at all exposure concentrations. Cd concentration in the cytosol of experimental tissues were measured and the results indicated that Cd levels in the cytosol of liver, kidney and gills increased 240.71, 32.05, and 40.16-fold, respectively 14 days after exposure to 1000 μgL-1 Cd. The accumulation of Cd in cytosol of tissues is in the order of liver> gills> kidney.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

metal bioaccumulation in persian sturgeon after sublethal exposure

tissue metal accumulations (gills, liver, kidney and muscle) in persian sturgeon (acipenser persicus) were compared folowing exposure to sublethal levels of waterborne cd (50, 400 and 1000 μg•l-1) after periods of 1, 2, 4 and 14 days. the obtained results indicate that at the end of 4 and 14 days of exposure, total tissue cadmium concentration followed the pattern: liver > gill > kidney > muscl...

full text

metal bioaccumulation in persian sturgeon after sublethal exposure

tissue metal accumulations (gills, liver, kidney and muscle) in persian sturgeon (acipenser persicus) were compared folowing exposure to sublethal levels of waterborne cd (50, 400 and 1000 μg•l-1) after periods of 1, 2, 4 and 14 days. the obtained results indicate that at the end of 4 and 14 days of exposure, total tissue cadmium concentration followed the pattern: liver > gill > kidney > muscl...

full text

Bioaccumulation of metals in Eisenia fetida after exposure to a metal-loaded bauxsol reagent.

The present study investigated the acute toxic effects of a metal-loaded Bauxsol reagent (MLBR), containing more than 6,450 mg kg(-1) of bound metal, on the earthworm Eisenia fetida. Bauxsol is manufactured by Virotec Global Solutions of Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia. The E. fetida were exposed to 0, 10, 20, 40, 60, and 80% treatments of MLBR plus cow manure for 28 d. Good motility and no m...

full text

Metal accumulation and sublethal effects in the sea anemone, Aiptasia pallida, after waterborne exposure to metal mixtures.

The marine environment is subjected to contamination by a complex mixture of metals from various anthropogenic sources. Measuring the biological responses of organisms to a complex mixture of metals allows for examination of metal-specific responses in an environmentally realistic exposure scenario. To address this issue, the sea anemone, Aiptasia pallida was exposed to a control and a metal mi...

full text

Assessment of Mercury Bioaccumulation in Zebra Cichlid (Cichlasoma Nigrofasciatum) Exposed to Sublethal Concentrations of Permethrin

Background: Aquatic ecosystems are frequently subjected to contamination by toxic heavy metals and pesticides, yet very little is known about the influence of pesticides on bioaccumulation of heavy metals in aquatic organisms. Mercury is a toxic metal with no known biological benefit to organisms. Bioavailability of mercury in aquatic environments depends on biological and non-biological parame...

full text

Hematological changes in Tinca tinca after exposure to lethal and sublethal doses of Mercury, Cadmium and Lead

Tench, Tinca tinca, were exposed to three treatments (one acute lethal 96 hrs Lc50/48 hrs and two chronic sublethal 10 and 25% Lc50/504 hrs) each of Mercury, Cadmium and Lead and its behaviour as an indicator of impaired hematology was studied. It was observed that impairments in hematological parameters (increased/decreased Hct, Hb, RBC, WBC and Lct) were reflected in behaviour of fish in the ...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 2  issue 1

pages  81- 90

publication date 2012-03-10

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023