
pmid: 23628239
In this study, the aqueous uptake and dietary assimilation (trophic transfer) of two endocrine disrupting compounds (dioxin and phathalic acid) in the green mussel Perna viridis were quantified. During short-term exposure period, dioxin rapidly sorbed onto phytoplankton and its accumulation was much higher than that of phthalate. The uptake of these two compounds by the mussels increased with increasing temperature and salinity (for dioxin only). The dietary assimilation of the two contaminants was rather modest (10-64% for dioxin and 20-47% for phthalate), and was greatly dependent on the food species and concentration. Interestingly, dietary assimilation increased with increasing diatom food concentration. Gut passage time was partially responsible for the variable dietary assimilation. Given the high dissolved uptake rate and the modest dietary assimilation, aqueous exposure was predicted to be the dominant bioaccumulation source for both dioxin and phthalate in the green mussels under most conditions.
Dioxin, Perna, Biokinetics, Phthalic Acids, Dioxins, Bioaccumulation, Exposure, Phthalate, Mussels, Animals, Water Pollutants, Chemical, Environmental Monitoring
Dioxin, Perna, Biokinetics, Phthalic Acids, Dioxins, Bioaccumulation, Exposure, Phthalate, Mussels, Animals, Water Pollutants, Chemical, Environmental Monitoring
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