| Literature DB >> 28634686 |
Takeo Sakurai1, Jun Kobayashi2,3, Nozomi Ito2, Shigeko Serizawa2, Hiroaki Shiraishi2, Tohru Yabe2, Yuichi Ishii2,4, Noriyuki Suzuki2.
Abstract
We determined the respiratory uptake and depuration kinetics of perfluorooctanesulfonate (PFOS) in Perinereis wilsoni, a polychaete sandworm used as a model species to investigate the fate of chemical pollutants in coastal environments. The sandworms were kept in gravel-packed containers, and the water levels were varied cyclically to mimic the tides. We used seawater kept at 17.1°C. A 7-day exposure period was followed by a 9-day depuration period. The dissolved PFOS concentration averaged 28 ng/L during the exposure period. Sandworm samples were collected regularly for analysis of PFOS concentrations, and a first-order-kinetics model was applied to the concentrations. The respiratory absorption efficiency of PFOS was estimated to be 11% that of oxygen, which is higher than the corresponding estimates reported for several fish species. The estimated depuration half-life of 15 days was comparable to previously reported estimates for fish and oligochaete species. The bioconcentration factor was 470.Entities:
Keywords: Absorption efficiency; Bioaccumulation; Bioconcentration; Perfluoroalkyl acids; Persistent organic pollutants (POPs); Polychaete
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28634686 PMCID: PMC5519661 DOI: 10.1007/s00128-017-2124-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull Environ Contam Toxicol ISSN: 0007-4861 Impact factor: 2.151
Fig. 1PFOS concentrations in sandworm samples from the exposure treatment (circles) and the control treatment and day-0 samples (crosses). The curve shows the first-order-kinetics model (Eq. 1) fitted to the exposure treatment data
Kinetics parameters for respiratory uptake and depuration of PFOS in the sandworm Perinereis wilsoni a
| Parameter | Unit | Point estimate | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| mL g-wet−1 day−1 | 22 | 7.9–70 |
|
| 11% | 3.9%–30% | |
|
| day−1 | 0.047 | 0.027–0.068 |
|
| day | 15 | 10–26 |
aAverage mass = 0.44 g-wet at the start of the experiment
b