0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Effects of different routes of exposure to metals on bioaccumulation and population growth of the cyclopoid copepod Paracyclopina nana

Chemosphere 2020 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Paul Dayras, Paul Dayras, Baghdad Ouddane, Baghdad Ouddane, Capucine Bialais, Capucine Bialais, Capucine Bialais, Capucine Bialais, Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Baghdad Ouddane, Baghdad Ouddane, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Baghdad Ouddane, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Baghdad Ouddane, Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Baghdad Ouddane, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Jae‐Seong Lee, Sami Souissi Capucine Bialais, Capucine Bialais, Sami Souissi

Summary

Researchers exposed the marine copepod Paracyclopina nana to cadmium, copper, and nickel individually and in mixtures, finding that metals compete with each other for bioaccumulation and that copepod populations pre-adapted to elevated copper showed greater ability to depurate toxic metals and recover population growth.

We examined effects of the three metals cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), and nickel (Ni) on two subpopulations of the cyclopoid copepod Paracyclopina nana. We sought to investigate the effects of metal exposure on population growth and structure of P. nana and to understand the parameters affecting the metal bioaccumulation in copepods. A first experiment tested the hypothesis of competition between these metals in a mixture using a P. nana mass culture in 10 L beakers with the sublethal concentrations (1/3 of LC50) as determined for E. affinis. A second experiment pursued the same with a P. nana population which was adapted to a higher Cu concentration for several generations (226.9 ± 15.9 μg g dw Cu in copepods) and using the proper sublethal concentrations for P. nana. After 96 h of exposure, results from the first experiment showed a decreasing population growth and instead of an increasing metal accumulation in copepods. Cd also appeared to be more accumulated when it was alone, confirming the hypothesis of metal competition in mixture. Results from the second experiment revealed less marked effects. When metal concentrations increased in the treatment it decreased in copepods, indicating depuration activity in the population already adapted to metal exposure. This paper is the first one investigating the parameters affecting the bioaccumulation capacity of P. nana in response to metals. It offers a better understanding of copepod responses to metal contamination in a complex aquatic environment.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper