- Effects of cadmium accumulation from suspended sediments and phytoplankton on the Oyster Saccostrea glomerata.
Effects of cadmium accumulation from suspended sediments and phytoplankton on the Oyster Saccostrea glomerata.
Metals are accumulated by filter feeding organisms via water, ingestion of suspended sediments or food. The uptake pathway can affect metal toxicity. Saccostrea glomerata were exposed to cadmium through cadmium-spiked suspended sediments (19 and 93Ī¼g/g dry mass) and cadmium-enriched phytoplankton (1.6-3Ī¼g/g dry mass) and cadmium uptake and effects measured. Oysters accumulated appreciable amounts of cadmium from both low and high cadmium spiked suspended sediment treatments (5.9Ā±0.4Ī¼g/g and 23Ā±2Ī¼g/g respectively compared to controls 0.97Ā±0.05Ī¼g/g dry mass). Only a small amount of cadmium was accumulated by ingestion of cadmium-enriched phytoplankton (1.9Ā±0.1Ī¼g/g compared to controls 1.2Ā±0.1Ī¼g/g). In the cadmium spiked suspended sediment experiments, most cadmium was desorbed from sediments and cadmium concentrations in S. glomerata were significantly related to dissolved cadmium concentrations (4-21Ī¼g/L) in the overlying water. In the phytoplankton feeding experiment cadmium concentrations in overlying water were <0.01Ī¼g/L. In both exposure experiments, cadmium-exposed oysters showed a significant reduction in total antioxidant capacity and significantly increased lipid peroxidation and percentage of destabilised lysosomes. Destabilised lysosomes in the suspended sediments experiments also resulted from stress of exposure to the suspended sediments. The study demonstrated that exposure to cadmium via suspended sediments and to low concentrations of cadmium through the ingestion of phytoplankton, can cause sublethal stress to S. glomerata.