Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9465807 | Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Experiments were conducted to assess the effects of copper on larval development in the barnacle Balanus amphitrite. In the first experiment, we compared the sensitivity of three naupliar stages to copper stress. Molting inhibition occurred at copper concentrations ranging from 32 μg lâ1 in nauplius II to 128 g lâ1 in nauplius VI. EC50 for molting ranged from 97 μg lâ1 in nauplius II to 129 g lâ1 in nauplius VI. Decreased survival occurred at 128 μg Cu lâ1 in all of the naupliar stages tested, with LC50 ranging from 145 in nauplius II to 213 μg lâ1 in nauplius VI. In the second experiment, we examined effects of copper on the development from nauplius II to cyprid. The larvae reached cypris stage only in treatments of ⩽16 μg Cu lâ1. Our study therefore showed that molting was a more sensitive endpoint than survival, nauplius II was the most sensitive naupliar stage, and that whole larval development assay was more sensitive than assays using a particular larval stage. The results were discussed with respect to the use of this species in toxicity tests.
Related Topics
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Authors
Jian-Wen Qiu, Vengatesen Thiyagarajan, Sam Cheung, Pei-Yuan Qian,