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Transfer of heavy metals from sediment to fish, and their
biliary excretion
Maria Andréasson & Göran Dave
Department of Zoophysiology, University of Göteborg,
Medicinaregatan 18, 413 90 Göteborg, Sweden
Received 21 November 1994; accepted
in revised form 10 September 1995
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Abstract
Uptake and biliary excretion of metals were studied
in rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, exposed through spiked
sediment to a mixture of seven heavy metals. Metal concentrations
and toxicity of bile and blood plasma were used as indicators of
exposure. Among the seven metals (Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Ni, Pb, and Zn)
only three (Cu, Hg, and Pb) were concentrated in the bile (bile-plasma
ratio >1). Bile-plasma ratios in the rainbow trout were similar
to those found in rats for Cu and Hg. Daphnia magna bioassays
were used to determine toxicity of bile and blood plasma in the
same trout. Toxicity of bile and blood plasma increased after treatment
with acid. An analysis of variance (ANOVA) showed tat toxicity of
bile and blood plasma to D. magna in metal-exposed trout
was significantly correlated with (1) bile and blood plasma test
concentration, (2) acid treatment of bile and blood plasma (hydrolysis
of metal-plasma and metal-bile complexes) and (3) sediment concentration
of metals during exposure of trout. In order to significantly detect
the magnitude of the exposure to a xenobiotic the biomarker must
respond in a dose- or time-dependent manner. Therefore, the potential
use of bile toxicity as a biomarker of heavy metal exposure in fish
is probably limited by the low bioconcentration of many of these
toxicants in bile.
Keywords: bile, Daphnia magna, fish, rainbow trout, water
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