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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Effects of Trace Metals on the Australian Abalone, Haliotis rubra

Gorski, Jacquelle, jacquelle.gorski@epa.vic.gov.au January 2007 (has links)
This thesis focussed on the effects of a range of trace metals on various stages of Haliotis rubra development. The trace metals assessed in this thesis were the essential metals Cu, Zn and Fe; and, the non-essential metals Hg, Cd and Pb. Copper and Hg proved to be the two most toxic metals to the life stages of H. rubra studied. The concentrations affecting normal development of the fertilised egg exposed for 48h showed a decreasing order of toxicity with 48hEC50 recorded at 7µg Cu/L, 20µg Hg/L, 42µg Zn/L, 4,102µg Fe/L, 4,515µg Cd/L, and 5,111µg Pb/L. Settlement and metamorphosis occur in normal larvae when aged 5 days, and exposure of the 5 day old larvae to the metals for 48h resulted in impaired crawling success at 128µg/L Cu and Hg, and 1250µg Cd/L. Settlement was inhibited after exposure to 128µg Cu/L, 32µg Hg/L, and 1250 Cd/L. Metamorphosis of larvae 96h after exposure was inhibited by 32µg Cu/L, 512µg Zn/L, 32µg Hg/L and 625µg Cd/L. The rate of meta morphosis was enhanced after exposure to Cu and Hg at 0.5µg/L and 64 - 256µg Zn/L. Exposure to Zn at concentrations 64, 128 and 256 µg Zn/L caused an increased rate of settlement and metamorphosis. Juvenile H. rubra exposed to the six metals for 96h were most sensitive to Cu, which produced a 96hLC50 of 87µg Cu/L compared to Hg with a 96hLC50 of 173µg Hg/L. Juvenile H. rubra were relatively insensitive to Zn and Cd with the 96h LC50 of 1730µg Zn/L and 3700µg Cd/L, respectively. Exposure to individual solutions of Cu, Zn, and Cd for 28 days resulted in juvenile H. rubra bioaccumulating significant concentrations of metals in the visceramantleedible foot muscle. Accumulation of Hg was greater in the mantle-viscera-edible foot muscle. Following exposure, depuration in clean seawater for 28 days produced varying decreases in metal concentrations for each tissue compartment. Sodium-potassium activated ATPase (Na+,K+-ATPase) activity in the gills of juvenile H. rubra was significantly affected following expos ure to the trace metals for 28 days, with a decreasing order of effect on enzyme activity of Hg-Cu-Cd-Zn. Depuration of H. rubra in clean seawater for 28 days resulted in the recovery of Na+,K+-ATPase activity to varying degrees. The recovery of ATPase activity was more efficient following exposure to Cd-Zn-Cu-Hg. The overall results of this thesis provide initial baseline information to evaluate the sensitivity of H. rubra to trace metal toxicants, and these results may be utilised by regulators for establishing marine water quality guidelines to protect H. rubra and other abalone species in their natural habitats.

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