4.7 Article

Warmer temperature increases toxicokinetic elimination of PCBs and PBDEs in Northern leopard frog larvae (Lithobates pipiens)

Journal

AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY
Volume 234, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquatox.2021.105806

Keywords

Bioaccumulation; Polychlorinated biphenyls; Polybrominated diphenyl ethers; Climate warming; Metabolic ecology

Funding

  1. SeaGrant Project [R/HCE-14]
  2. Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of WisconsinMadison

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study focused on the accumulation and elimination of two PCBs and a PBDE mixture in Northern leopard frog tadpoles under different temperatures. It was found that tissue concentrations of the toxicants were linearly related to dietary concentrations and elimination was faster at higher temperatures. The apparent activation energy for elimination played a crucial role, showing similar temperature sensitivities among different processes.
We studied the temperature dependence of accumulation and elimination of two polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs; PCB-70 and PCB-126) and a commercial mixture of congeners of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs; DE-71 (TM))) in Northern leopard frog (Lithobates pipiens) tadpoles. We reared tadpoles at 18, 23, or 27 degrees C for 5.3 or up to 13.6 weeks (longer at cooler temperature where development is slower) on diets containing the toxicants, each at several different toxicant concentrations, and compared tissue concentrations as a function of food concentration and rearing temperature. Following > 1 month of accumulation, tissue concentrations of all three toxicants in exposed tadpoles were linearly related to dietary concentrations as expected for first order kinetics, with no significant effect of rearing temperature. We also raised free-swimming L. pipiens tadpoles for 14 days on foods containing either toxicant at 18 or 27 degrees C during an accumulation phase, and then during depuration (declining toxicant) phase of 14 days we provided food without toxicants and measured the decline of toxicants in tadpole tissue. All the congeners were eliminated faster at warmer rearing temperature, as expected. Using Arrhenius' equation, we calculated that the apparent activation energy for elimination of both PCB congeners by tadpoles was 1.21 eV (95% confidence interval 0.6-1.8 eV). We discuss how this value was within the range of estimates for metabolic reactions generally (range 0.2 - 1.2 eV), which might include metabolic pathways for biotransformation and elimination of PCBs. Furthermore, we discuss how the lack of an effect of rearing temperature on tadpole near-steady-state tissue residue levels suggests that faster elimination at the warmer temperature was balanced by faster uptake, which is plausible considering the similar temperature sensitivities (i.e., activation energies) of all these processes. Although interactions between toxicants and temperature can be complex and likely toxicant-dependent, it is plausible that patterns observed in tadpoles might apply to other aquatic organisms. Published data on depuration in 11 fish species eliminating 8 other organic toxicants indicated that they also had similar apparent activation energy for elimination (0.82 +/- 0.12 eV; 95% confidence interval 0.56 - 1.08 eV), even though none of those studied toxicants were PCBs or PBDEs. Additional research on toxicant-temperature interactions can help improve our ability to predict toxicant bioaccumulation in warming climate scenarios.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available