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Acute toxicities of eleven metals to early life-history stages of the yellow crab Cancer anthonyi
Authors:J. M. Macdonald  J. D. Shields  R. K. Zimmer-Faust
Affiliation:(1) Marine Science Institute, University of California at Santa Barbara, 93106 Santa Barbara, California, USA;(2) Marine Science Institute in Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, USA;(3) Present address: Department of Environmental Toxicology, University of California at Davis, 95616 Davis, California, USA
Abstract:We report findings from the first laboratory experiments to assess toxicities of metals found in drilling muds to embryos and prezoeae of a brachyuran crab. Embryos of Cancer anthonyi are brooded externally on the abdomen of female crabs; thus, embryos may be continuously exposed to pollutants contained in sediments of contaminated benthic habitats. Lethal concentrations of metals to embryos after 7 d exposures were: iron and barium (sulfate), 1 000 mg l–1; barium (chloride), 100 mg l–1; aluminum and nickel, 10 mg l–1; copper and lead, l mg l–1; cadmium, chromium VI and manganese, lE0.01 mg l–1; mercury, lE0.001 mg l–1. All metals effectively retarded embryos from hatching at concentrations equal or lower to those causing mortality, except for cadmium. Particularly impressive was iron, which suppressed hatching at l to 10 mg l–1, concentrations previously found non-deleterious to marine organisms and 100 times more dilute than concentrations causing significant embryo mortality. The effects of metals on embryos increased as a function of exposure duration. Embryo mortality was delayed for at least 120 h at concentrations lE1.0 mg l–1, with the exception of mercury. Lethal concentrations established at 96 h were meaningless for crab embryos, because acute toxic thresholds were not attained by that time. Larval survivorship to chromium VI, copper, and zinc increased following exposure of embryos to these metals at low concentrations (lE1.0 mg l–1), suggesting induction of biochemical pathways for products which bind or metabolize metals. Identical exposures of embryos to lead failed to enhance subsequent larval survivorship, showing that inductions may be metal-specific. We suggest that exposures of brachyuran embryos at field sites and the success of their subsequent hatching in the laboratory may be a means of assessing environmental contamination otherwise difficult to monitor.
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