Effects of culture conditions on the sensitivity of a phoxocephalid amphipod, rhepoxynius abronius, to cadmium in sediment
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
- Vol. 7 (12) , 953-959
- https://doi.org/10.1002/etc.5620071201
Abstract
Experiments were conducted to determine (a) the feasibility of maintaining laboratory cultures of the infaunal phoxocephalid amphipod Rhepoxynius abronius (Barnard), (b) the relative sensitivities of cultured versus freshly collected adult animals, (c) the sensitivities of adult versus juvenile R. abronius to cadmium in sediment and (d) the effect of handling on cultured amphipods. R. abronius held in sediment in a flow‒through seawater system for various lengths of time showed high survival, growth and sexual maturation for periods of up to 180 d. Cultured amphipods appeared normal and survived well (93%) under control toxicity test conditions, but were more sensitive to cadmium in sediment (LC50 = 4.4) than were freshly collected amphipods (LC50 = 8.7). Differences in cadmium LC50s between size classes (LC50 = 8.2 for juveniles and 11.5 for adults) were statistically significant, but not substantial. We recommend that large juveniles and adults (3 to 5 mm) be used in sediment toxicity tests because they are available from natural populations throughout the year, and that amphipods be collected within 14 d of use in sediment toxicity tests to minimize the interaction between culture and contaminant stresses.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inter-laboratory comparison of a sediment toxicity test using the marine amphipod, Rhepoxynius abroniusMarine Environmental Research, 1986
- Sediment toxicity to a marine infaunal amphipod: Cadmium and its interaction with sewage sludgeMarine Environmental Research, 1986
- Ecological changes in the Southern California Bight near a large sewage outfall: benthic conditions in 1980 and 1983Marine Ecology Progress Series, 1986
- Exposure of two species of deposit-feeding amphipods to sediment-associated [3H]benzo[a]pyrene: Uptake, metabolism and covalent binding to tissue macromoleculesAquatic Toxicology, 1985
- Phoxocephalid Amphipod Bioassay for Marine Sediment ToxicityPublished by ASTM International ,1985
- Sediment Toxicity, Contamination, and Macrobenthic Communities Near a Large Sewage OutfallPublished by ASTM International ,1985
- Toxicity of sewage sludge toRhepoxynius abronius, a marine benthic amphipodArchives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, 1984
- EDTA chelation and zinc antagonism with cadmium in sediment: effects on the behavior and mortality of two infaunal amphipodsMarine Biology, 1984
- Behavioral responses of a phoxo-cephalid amphipod to organic enrichment and trace metals in sedimentMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1984
- Sediment toxicity and the distribution of amphipods in Commencement bay, Washington, USAMarine Pollution Bulletin, 1982