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HERO ID
2142436
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Bioaccumulation and biomagnification of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in aquatic organisms
Author(s)
D'Adamo, R; Pelosi, S; Trotta, P; Sansone, G
Year
1997
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Marine Chemistry
ISSN:
0304-4203
EISSN:
1872-7581
Volume
56
Issue
1-2
Page Numbers
45-49
Language
English
DOI
10.1016/S0304-4203(96)00042-4
Web of Science Id
WOS:A1997WJ15500005
Abstract
Uptake and degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons were studied in a laboratory scale food chain consisting of Dunaliella tertiolecta (microalga), Mytilus galloprouincialis (mussel) and Dicentrarchus Zabrax (fish), in tanks supplied with open water flow. The toxicants, benzo(a)pyrene and 7,12-dimethyl benz(a)anthracene, were added and samples were taken every ten days. Bioaccumulation of toxicants in the food chain steps and the physiological response of organisms’ xenobiotic-metabolizing enzyme systems were tested. Mixed-function oxygenase enzymes were evaluated through quantitation of benzo(a)pyrene-monooxygenase in the mussels and ethoxyresorufin-0-diethylase in the fish. In the mussels benzo(a)pyrene and 7,12-dimethyl benz(a)anthracene are bioaccumulated in contrast with the seabasses in which only negligible quantities were found. These different responses among mussels and fish are probably caused by the very efficient detoxification enzymatic system located in the liver of the fish. The mussel is confirtned as a biomonitor of hydrocarbons in the environment because of its ability to bioaccumulate, whereas seabass shows a strategy of survival in contaminated environments based on an active oxidative enzymatic system.
Keywords
aquatic food chain; biomagnification; fish; MFO; mussel; PAHs
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