Food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals

International audience Algal toxins in the environment are known to accumulate up the food chain via dietary pathways, often with little apparent effect on the health of the accumulating organism. Several laboratory studies on bivalves, however, have found that exposure to toxic dinoflagellates may...

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Main Authors: Pouil, Simon, Clausing, Rachel, Metian, Marc, Bustamante, Paco, Bottein, Yasmine, Dechraoui
Other Authors: International Atomic Energy Agency - Environment Laboratories Monaco (IAEA-EL), LIttoral ENvironnement et Sociétés (LIENSs), La Rochelle Université (ULR)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-04198167
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spelling ftunivrochelle:oai:HAL:hal-04198167v1 2024-02-11T10:08:28+01:00 Food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals Pouil, Simon Clausing, Rachel Metian, Marc Bustamante, Paco Bottein, Yasmine, Dechraoui International Atomic Energy Agency - Environment Laboratories Monaco (IAEA-EL) LIttoral ENvironnement et Sociétés (LIENSs) La Rochelle Université (ULR)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) Nantes, France 2018-10-21 https://hal.science/hal-04198167 en eng HAL CCSD hal-04198167 https://hal.science/hal-04198167 18th International Conference on Harmful Algae https://hal.science/hal-04198167 18th International Conference on Harmful Algae, Oct 2018, Nantes, France Brevetoxins multiple stressors trophic transfer [SDE]Environmental Sciences info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference papers 2018 ftunivrochelle 2024-01-23T23:34:07Z International audience Algal toxins in the environment are known to accumulate up the food chain via dietary pathways, often with little apparent effect on the health of the accumulating organism. Several laboratory studies on bivalves, however, have found that exposure to toxic dinoflagellates may alter important processes such as clearance rates or oxygen consumption. Neurotoxins produced by some of these algae have also been shown to act on ion channels in fish. These behavioral or physiological effects may, in turn, alter species responses to concurrent stressors in the environment, such as variable temperatures or salinity, or the presence of other contaminants (e.g. metals) often co-occurring with biotoxins in coastal waters. Experimental food chains involving toxic dinoflagellates provide amodel to assess interactions of toxin exposure with other environmental factors or contaminants in marine organisms. In this example, we examined the trophic transfer of brevetoxins (PbTxs) in a Karenia brevis-Mytilus edulis (blue mussel)-Scophthalmus maximus (turbot) food chain with simultaneous exposure to metals (combinations of radioisotopes 65Zn, 54Mn, 109Cd and 57Co). This modelallowed us to examine accumulation-depuration processes of PbTxs along the food web as well as how accumulated PbTxs affected metal uptake and assimilation. We found that after 4 days feeding with 980 ± 20 cellsKarenia brevis mL-1, mussels had accumulated 0.49 ± 0.22 μg PbTx eq g-1 wet wt in their soft tissues. Despite high toxin retention (78% remaining after 23 d depuration during metals exposure), PbTx exposure did not affect the assimilation of metals in mussels, excepting for small but significant increases inrates of 109Cd uptake. Turbot appeared to depurate dietary PbTxs more efficiently than mussels, as fish fed once with PbTx-containingmussel tissue contained similar concentrations of toxin in their viscera to those fed 15 times over 3 weeks. Similarly to mussels, assimilation of metals (65Zn and 54Mn) in turbot showed no ... Conference Object Scophthalmus maximus Turbot HAL - Université de La Rochelle
institution Open Polar
collection HAL - Université de La Rochelle
op_collection_id ftunivrochelle
language English
topic Brevetoxins
multiple stressors
trophic transfer
[SDE]Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle Brevetoxins
multiple stressors
trophic transfer
[SDE]Environmental Sciences
Pouil, Simon
Clausing, Rachel
Metian, Marc
Bustamante, Paco
Bottein, Yasmine, Dechraoui
Food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals
topic_facet Brevetoxins
multiple stressors
trophic transfer
[SDE]Environmental Sciences
description International audience Algal toxins in the environment are known to accumulate up the food chain via dietary pathways, often with little apparent effect on the health of the accumulating organism. Several laboratory studies on bivalves, however, have found that exposure to toxic dinoflagellates may alter important processes such as clearance rates or oxygen consumption. Neurotoxins produced by some of these algae have also been shown to act on ion channels in fish. These behavioral or physiological effects may, in turn, alter species responses to concurrent stressors in the environment, such as variable temperatures or salinity, or the presence of other contaminants (e.g. metals) often co-occurring with biotoxins in coastal waters. Experimental food chains involving toxic dinoflagellates provide amodel to assess interactions of toxin exposure with other environmental factors or contaminants in marine organisms. In this example, we examined the trophic transfer of brevetoxins (PbTxs) in a Karenia brevis-Mytilus edulis (blue mussel)-Scophthalmus maximus (turbot) food chain with simultaneous exposure to metals (combinations of radioisotopes 65Zn, 54Mn, 109Cd and 57Co). This modelallowed us to examine accumulation-depuration processes of PbTxs along the food web as well as how accumulated PbTxs affected metal uptake and assimilation. We found that after 4 days feeding with 980 ± 20 cellsKarenia brevis mL-1, mussels had accumulated 0.49 ± 0.22 μg PbTx eq g-1 wet wt in their soft tissues. Despite high toxin retention (78% remaining after 23 d depuration during metals exposure), PbTx exposure did not affect the assimilation of metals in mussels, excepting for small but significant increases inrates of 109Cd uptake. Turbot appeared to depurate dietary PbTxs more efficiently than mussels, as fish fed once with PbTx-containingmussel tissue contained similar concentrations of toxin in their viscera to those fed 15 times over 3 weeks. Similarly to mussels, assimilation of metals (65Zn and 54Mn) in turbot showed no ...
author2 International Atomic Energy Agency - Environment Laboratories Monaco (IAEA-EL)
LIttoral ENvironnement et Sociétés (LIENSs)
La Rochelle Université (ULR)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
format Conference Object
author Pouil, Simon
Clausing, Rachel
Metian, Marc
Bustamante, Paco
Bottein, Yasmine, Dechraoui
author_facet Pouil, Simon
Clausing, Rachel
Metian, Marc
Bustamante, Paco
Bottein, Yasmine, Dechraoui
author_sort Pouil, Simon
title Food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals
title_short Food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals
title_full Food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals
title_fullStr Food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals
title_full_unstemmed Food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals
title_sort food web transfer of biotoxins as part of a suite of multiple contaminants: a case study of brevetoxins and metals
publisher HAL CCSD
publishDate 2018
url https://hal.science/hal-04198167
op_coverage Nantes, France
genre Scophthalmus maximus
Turbot
genre_facet Scophthalmus maximus
Turbot
op_source 18th International Conference on Harmful Algae
https://hal.science/hal-04198167
18th International Conference on Harmful Algae, Oct 2018, Nantes, France
op_relation hal-04198167
https://hal.science/hal-04198167
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