Metal and organic contaminants in marine invertebrates from Antarctica
Metadata record for data from ASAC Project 1005 Metal and organic contaminants in marine invertebrates from Antarctica, field study of their concentrations, laboratory study of their toxicities. See the link below for public details on this project.
Data from this project are now unrecoverable. Several publications arising from the work are attached to this metadata record, and are available to AAD staff only.
Taken from the referenced publications:
Bioaccumulation of Cd, Pb, Cu and Zn in the Antarctic gammaridean amphipod Paramoera walkeri was investigated at Casey station. The main goals were to provide information on accumulation strategies of the organisms tested and to verify toxicokinetic models as a predictive tool. The organisms accumulated metals upon exposure and it was possible to estimate significant model parameters of two compartment and hyperbolic models. These models were successfully verified in a second toxicokinetic study. However, the application of hyperbolic models appears to be more promising as a predictive tool for metals in amphipods compared to compartment models, which have failed to adequately predict metal accumulation in experiments with increasing external exposures in previous studies. The following kinetic bioconcentration factors (BCFs) for the theoretical equilibrium were determined: 150-630 (Cd), 1600-7000 (Pb), 1700-3800 (Cu) and 670-2400 (Zn). We find decreasing BCFs with increasing external metal dosing but similar results for treatments with and without natural UV radiation and for the combined effect of different exposure regimes (single versus multiple metal exposure) and/or the amphipod collective involved (Beall versus Denison Island). A tentative estimation showed the following sequence if sensitivity of P. walkeri to an increase of soluble metal exposure: 0.2-3.0 micrograms Cd per litre, 0.12-0.25 micrograms Pb per litre, 0.9-3.0 micrograms Cu per litre and 9-26 micrograms Zn per litre. Thus, the amphipod investigated proved to be more sensitive as biomonitor compared to gammarids from German coastal waters (with the exception of Cd) and to copepods from the Weddell Sea inferred from literature data.
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This study provides information on LC50 toxicity tests and bioaccumulation of heavy metals in the nearshore Antarctic gammarid, Paramoera walkeri. The 4 day LC50 values were 970 micrograms per litre for copper and 670 micrograms per litre for cadmium. Net uptake rates and bioconcentration factors of these elements were determined under laboratory conditions. After 12 days of exposure to 30 micrograms per litre, the net uptake rates were 5.2 and 0.78 micrograms per gram per day and the bioconcentration factors were 2080 and 311 for copper and cadmium respectively. The body concentrations of copper were significantly correlated with the concentrations of this element in the water. Accumulation of copper and cadmium continued for the entire exposure suggesting that heavy metals concentrations were not regulated to constant concentrations in the body. Using literature data about two compartments (water-animal) first-order kinetic models, a very good agreement was found between body concentrations observed after exposure and model predicted. Exposure of P. walkeri to mixtures of copper and cadmium showed that accumulation of these elements can be assessed by addition of results obtained from single exposure, with only a small degree of uncertainty. The study provides information on the sensitivity of one Antarctic species towards contaminants, and the results were compared with data of similar species from lower latitudes. An important finding is that sensitivity to toxic chemicals and toxicokinetic parameters in the species investigated are comparable with those of non-polar species. The characteristics of bioaccumulation demonstrate that P. walkeri is a circumpolar species with the potential to be a standard biological indicator for use in monitoring programmes of Antarctic nearshore ecosystems. the use of model prediction provide further support to utilise these organisms for biomonitoring.
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Heavy-metal concentrations were determined in tissues of different species of benthic invertebrates collected in the Casey region where an old waste-disposal tip site is a source of contamination. the species studied included the bivalve Laternula elliptica, starfish Notasterias armata, heart urchins Abatus nimrodi and A. ingens and gammaridean amphipod Paramoera walkeri. The specimens were collected at both reference and contaminated locations where lead was the priority element and copper was the next most important in terms of increased concentrations. The strong association between a gradient of contamination and concentrations in all species tested indicated that they are reflecting well the environmental changes, and that they appear as appropriate biological indicators of heavy-metal contamination. Aspects of the biology of species with different functional roles in the marine ecosystem are discussed in relation to their suitability for wider use in Antarctic monitoring programmes. For example, in terms of heavy-metal bioaccumulation, the bivalve appears as the most sensitive species to detect contamination; the starfish provides information on the transfer of metals through the food web while the heart urchin and gammarid gave indications of the spatial and temporal patterns of the environmental contamination. The information gathered about processes of contaminant uptake and partitioning among different tissues and species could be used in later studies to investigate the behaviour and the source of contaminants.
Simple
Identification info
- Alternate title
- Metal and organic contaminants in marine invertebrates from Antarctica
- Date (Publication)
- 2012-03-21
- Edition
- 1
Originator
Publisher
Principal investigator
Collaborator
- Name
- CAASM Metadata
- Other citation details
- Restricted access
- Status
- Completed
Custodian
- Topic category
-
- Environment
- Oceans
Extent
Extent
- Description
- Temporal Coverage
Temporal extent
- TimePeriod
- 1996-09-30 2000-03-31
- Title
- Bioaccumulation of trace metals in the Antarctic amphipod Paramoera walkeri (Stebbing, 1906): comparison of two-compartment and hyperbolic toxicokinetic models.
- Date (Publication)
- 2003
- Citation identifier
- 65
Author
- Name
- Aquatic Toxicology
- Page
- 117-140
- Title
- Biological monitoring of heavy-metal contamination in coastal waters off Casey Station, Windmill Islands, East Antarctica.
- Date (Publication)
- 2002
- Citation identifier
- 25
Author
- Name
- Polar Biology
- Page
- 206-215
- Title
- Laternula elliptica as a biomonitor for metal pollutants from waste disposal sites in the Antarctic
- Date (Publication)
- 2001
Author
- Name
- 3rd International Conference on Marine Pollution and Ecotoxicology.
- Other citation details
- 10-14 June 2001 Hong Kong 66
- Title
- The use of Laternula elliptica to monitor metal pollution from human activity in Antarctica
- Date (Publication)
- 2001
Author
- Name
- World Chemistry Congress
- Other citation details
- 1-6 July 2001, Brisbane Australia 155
- Title
- Effects of contaminants in the Antarctic environment - potential of the gammarid amphipod crustacean Paramoera walkeri as a biological indicator for Antarctic ecosystems
- Date (Publication)
- 2000
- Citation identifier
- 49
Author
- Name
- Aquatic Toxicology
- Page
- 131-143
- Title
- Contaminants in the Antarctic Environment VII. : linking contamination to ecological risk.
- Date (Publication)
- 2000
Author
- Name
- Proceedings of the Sixth International Symposium on Cold Region Development
- Page
- 144-147
- Title
- Contaminants in the Antarctic Environment XII Use of the gammarid Paramorea walkeri as potential biological indicator of marine environmental contamination.
- Date (Publication)
- 2000
Author
- Name
- Proceedings of the Sixth International Symposium on Cold Region Development
- Page
- 334-335
- Title
- The effects of exposing the Antarctic amphipod, Paramoera walkeri (Stebbing) to various chemicals, using tests with different endpoints.
- Date (Publication)
- 1997
Author
- Name
- Fourth Annual Conference of Australasian Society for Ecotoxicology, "Ecotoxicology: assessment of environmental harm".
- Other citation details
- Brisbane 17 - 19 July 1997. 02.3
- Title
- Integrated montoring approach for risk assessment of the marine environment of Brown Bay impacted by Thalla Valley tip, Casey, Antarctica.
- Date (Publication)
- 1997
Author
- Name
- Fourth Annual Conference of Australasian Society for Ecotoxicology, "Ecotoxicology: assessment of environmental harm".
- Other citation details
- Brisbane 17 - 19 July 1997. 09.1
- NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
-
- EARTH SCIENCE > HUMAN DIMENSIONS > ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS > CONTAMINANT LEVELS/SPILLS
- Keywords
-
- Bioaccumulation
- Heavy Metals
- Amphipods
- Bioconcentration
- NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
-
- FIELD INVESTIGATION
- FIELD SURVEYS
- NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
-
- AMD/AU
- AMD
- CEOS
- NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
-
- CONTINENT > ANTARCTICA
- GEOGRAPHIC REGION > POLAR
Resource constraints
- Use limitation
- This metadata record is publicly available.
Resource constraints
- Access constraints
- licence
- Other constraints
- Copies of some of the referenced publications are available for download to AAD staff only at the provided URL.
Resource constraints
- File type
- Portable Network Graphic
- Title
- Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
- Website
-
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
Legal code for Creative Commons by Attribution 4.0 International license
- Use constraints
- licence
- Other constraints
- This data set conforms to the CCBY Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Please follow instructions listed in the citation reference provided at http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=ASAC_1005 when using these data.
- Language
- English
- Character encoding
- UTF8
Distribution Information
Distributor
Distributor
Distributor
- Fees
- Free
- Planned available datetime
- 2012-03-21T00:00:00
- Units of distribution
- MB
- Transfer size
- 2
- Distribution format
-
- OnLine resource
-
PROJECT HOME PAGE
Public information for ASAC project 1005
- OnLine resource
-
VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
Download point for the papers
- OnLine resource
-
VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
Citation reference for this metadata record and dataset
Resource lineage
- Statement
- Values provided in temporal and spatial coverage are approximate only.
- Hierarchy level
- Dataset
- Maintenance and update frequency
- As needed
- Maintenance note
- 2012-06-04 - record updated by Dave Connell after scans of the publications were made in 2008. 2014-12-03 - record updated by Dave Connell - basic updates.
Metadata
- Metadata identifier
- string/ASAC_1005
- Language
- English
- Character encoding
- UTF8
Author
Sponsor
Owner
Type of resource
- Resource scope
- Dataset
Alternative metadata reference
- Title
- gov.nasa.gsfc.gcmd
- Citation identifier
- 8ac43d4f-c733-43cb-bf33-b55683263f68
Alternative metadata reference
- Title
- gov.nasa.gsfc.gcmd
- Date (Last Revision)
- 2015-11-30T04:04:26
Identifier
- Description
- metadata.extraction_date
Alternative metadata reference
- Title
- gov.nasa.gsfc.gcmd
- Citation identifier
- 8.6
- Metadata linkage
-
http://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1005
Point of truth for the metadata record
- Date info (Creation)
- 2000-08-09T00:00:00
- Date info (Last Update)
- 2017-04-26
Metadata standard
- Title
- ISO 19115-3
- Edition
- 2014
- Other citation details
- Version 1
- Title
- DIF to ISO 19115-1 Profile