4.7 Article

Copper exposure does not alter the ability of intertidal sea cucumber Cucumaria miniata to tolerate emersion during low tide

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 872, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162085

Keywords

Copper toxicity; Air exposure; Multiple stressors; Metabolism; ammonia excretion; Marine

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Intertidal animals are exposed to tidal emersion and copper toxicity, but little is known about the interactions of these two stressors. This study examined the effects of copper exposure and tidal emersion on the sea cucumber Cucumaria miniata, finding that copper accumulated in the respiratory tree and had negative effects on aerobic metabolism. Emersion affected copper accumulation and increased oxygen uptake and ammonia excretion upon re-immersion.
Intertidal animals experience cycles of tidal emersion from water and are vulnerable to copper (Cu) exposure due to anthropogenic toxicant input into marine waters. Both emersion and Cu toxicity can cause damage to physiological processes like aerobic metabolism, ammonia excretion, and osmoregulation, but the interactions of the combination of these two stressors on marine invertebrates are understudied. Mixed effects of 96 h of low and high Cu exposure (20 and 200 mu g/L) followed by 6 h of tidal emersion were evaluated on the intertidal sea cucumber Cucumaria miniata. The respiratory tree accumulated the highest concentrations of Cu, followed by the introvert retractor muscle, body wall, and coelomic fluid. Emersion affected accumulation of Cu, perhaps by inhibiting excretion. 200 mu g/L of Cu in-creased lactate production in the respiratory tree, indicative of damaged aerobic metabolism. Cu diminished ammonia excretion, but emersion increased oxygen uptake and ammonia excretion upon re-immersion. The combination of the two stressors did not have any interactive effects on metabolism or ammonia excretion. Neither Cu exposure nor emer-sion altered ion (sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium) content of the coelomic fluid. Overall, results of this study suggest that Cu exposure does not alter C. miniata's high tolerance to emersion, and some potential strategies that this species uses to overcome environmental stress are illuminated.

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