Influence of metal (Cd and Zn) waterborne exposure on radionuclide (134Cs, 110mAg, and 57Co) bioaccumulation by rainbow trout (ONCORHYNCHUS MYKISS): a field and laboratory study.

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01/02/2002

OLIVIER AUSSEIL, CHRISTELLE ADAM, JACQUELINE GARNIER-LAPLACE, JEAN-PIERRE BAUDIN, CLAUDE CASELLAS, JEAN-MARC PORCHER Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, Vol. 21, No. 3, pp. 619-625

Type de document > *Article de revue
Mots clés publication scientifique > radioécologie en milieu contrôlé , bioaccumulation , poisson , radionucléides
Unité de recherche > IRSN/DEI/SECRE/LRE
Auteurs > ADAM Christelle , GARNIER-LAPLACE Jacqueline

Field and laboratory experiments were carried out to assess the influence of Cd and Zn on the contamination levels of 110mAg, 57Co, and 134Cs in rainbow trout. During a four-week prior exposure phase, two fish groups were held in tanks in the Lot River (France) at a reference (<0.05 µg Cd/L and 68 µg/ Zn/l) and at a polluted site (1.5 µg Cd/L and 152 µg Zn/L). During a subsequent phase, organisms were brought back to the laboratory, where the radionuclide accumulation and depuration were studied for 14 and 7 d, respectively. During this second phase, the water used in the experiments was brought back from the two sites on the Lot River in order to work under the same chemical conditions. The potential effect of chronic exposure to stable metals on several biomarkers bas been explored: Plasma analysis indicated the disruption of certain variables linked to the energetic metabolism and to the maintenance of the ionic balance. In contrast, no significant disruption of the measured enzyme activities was observed. With regard to the bioaccumulation of radionuclides, concentrations in fish exposed to metals are much lower than those in fish from the control group. Various hypotheses are proposed to link fish metabolic profiles due to metal exposure to the radiocontamination of organisms.