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A critical body residue approach for predicting persistent bioaccumulative toxicant effects on reproduction and population dynamics of meiobenthic copepods.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Chandler, GT; Ferguson, PL; Klauber, WW; Washburn, KM
Published in: Environmental toxicology and chemistry
May 2012

Critical body residues (CBRs) are the measured tissue toxicant concentrations yielding a median dose-response on a dry-weight or lipid-normalized basis. They facilitate management decisions for species protection using tissue analysis. Population CBR is the mean dose yielding 50% population suppression and was predicted here in Amphiascus tenuiremis for fipronil sulfide (FS) using lifetables and the Leslie matrix. Microplate bioassays (ASTM E-2317-14) produced biomass sufficient for dry mass and lipid-normalized CBR estimates of reproduction (fertility) and population growth suppression. Significant FS toxic effects were delayed naupliar development (at ≥0.10 µg L(-1)), delayed copepodite development (at 0.85 µg L(-1)), decreased reproductive success (at ≥ 0.39 µg L(-1)), and decreased offspring production (at 0.85 µg L(-1)). A reproductive median effective concentration (EC50) of 0.16 µg L(-1) (95% CI: 0.12-0.21 µg L(-1)) corresponded to an adult all-sex CBR and lipid-normalized CBR of 0.38 pg FS · µg(-1) dry weight (95% CI: 0.27-0.52 pg FS · µg(-1)) or 2.8 pg FS · µg(-1) lipid (95% CI: 2.2-3.6 pg FS · µg(-1)), respectively. Copepod log bioconcentration factor (BCF) = 4.11 ± 0.2. Leslie matrix projections regressed against internal dose predicted fewer than five gravid females in a population by the third generation at 0.39 and 0.85 µg FS · L(-1) (i.e., 9.6-10.2 µg FS · µg(-1) lipid), and 50% population suppression at a CBR of 1.6 pg FS · µg(-1) lipid. This more integrative population CBR as a management tool would fall 1.75 times below the CBR for the single most sensitive endpoint-fertility rate.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Environmental toxicology and chemistry

DOI

EISSN

1552-8618

ISSN

0730-7268

Publication Date

May 2012

Volume

31

Issue

5

Start / End Page

1076 / 1082

Related Subject Headings

  • Water Pollutants, Chemical
  • Seawater
  • Reproduction
  • Pyrazoles
  • Population Dynamics
  • Models, Biological
  • Male
  • Lipids
  • Fertility
  • Female
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Chandler, G. T., Ferguson, P. L., Klauber, W. W., & Washburn, K. M. (2012). A critical body residue approach for predicting persistent bioaccumulative toxicant effects on reproduction and population dynamics of meiobenthic copepods. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 31(5), 1076–1082. https://doi.org/10.1002/etc.1766
Chandler, G Thomas, P Lee Ferguson, W. W. Klauber, and K. M. Washburn. “A critical body residue approach for predicting persistent bioaccumulative toxicant effects on reproduction and population dynamics of meiobenthic copepods.Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 31, no. 5 (May 2012): 1076–82. https://doi.org/10.1002/etc.1766.
Chandler GT, Ferguson PL, Klauber WW, Washburn KM. A critical body residue approach for predicting persistent bioaccumulative toxicant effects on reproduction and population dynamics of meiobenthic copepods. Environmental toxicology and chemistry. 2012 May;31(5):1076–82.
Chandler, G. Thomas, et al. “A critical body residue approach for predicting persistent bioaccumulative toxicant effects on reproduction and population dynamics of meiobenthic copepods.Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, vol. 31, no. 5, May 2012, pp. 1076–82. Epmc, doi:10.1002/etc.1766.
Chandler GT, Ferguson PL, Klauber WW, Washburn KM. A critical body residue approach for predicting persistent bioaccumulative toxicant effects on reproduction and population dynamics of meiobenthic copepods. Environmental toxicology and chemistry. 2012 May;31(5):1076–1082.
Journal cover image

Published In

Environmental toxicology and chemistry

DOI

EISSN

1552-8618

ISSN

0730-7268

Publication Date

May 2012

Volume

31

Issue

5

Start / End Page

1076 / 1082

Related Subject Headings

  • Water Pollutants, Chemical
  • Seawater
  • Reproduction
  • Pyrazoles
  • Population Dynamics
  • Models, Biological
  • Male
  • Lipids
  • Fertility
  • Female