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Enhancing the utility of in vitro digestive fluid extraction as a management tool for contaminated aquatic sediments
Donald P. Weston, University of California, Berkeley
Technical Completion Report (University of California Water Resources Center), Project Number W-927.
ABSTRACT: A technique has recently been proposed to assess the bioavailability of
sediment-associated contaminants by in vitro incubation of the sediments in digestive
fluids of a deposit-feeding organism. This procedure mimics the chemical
environment to which a contaminated particle would be exposed as it passes through
the gut, and is based on the presumption that the bioavailable contaminant fraction is
that which is desorbable under these conditions. This study was intended to further
explore some key assumptions and limitations of this procedure. With regards to use
of the technique to measure trace metal bioavailability, it was found that the
procedure does allow oxygenation of the gut fluid in comparison to the in vivo gut
environment which is near anoxic. This oxygenation did influence solubilization of
about half the trace metals tested, though the effect was usually too small to have an
appreciable impact on risk assessment decisions. With regards to assessment of
bioavailability of organic contaminants, there was an excellent correlation between
the proportion of contaminant solubilized in vitro, and that judged to be bioavailable
by other in vivo techniques using two deposit-feeding polychaetes. This relationship
held not only for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons which had been previously
studied, but for several other pesticides and chlorinated organic compounds.
Moreover, one traditional measure of bioavailability (absorption efficiency as
measured by a dual label technique) was shown to underestimate bioavailability due
to complications caused by selective feeding. The digestive fluid technique showed
considerable promise across a broader range of contaminants and substrate types than
had been previously tested, and appears to be a simple and rapid means to assess
bioavailability, and obtain information otherwise available only by using live animals
and more lengthy and logistically difficult procedures.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Donald P. Weston,
"Enhancing the utility of in vitro digestive fluid extraction as a management tool for contaminated aquatic sediments"
(June 1, 2003).
University of California Water Resources Center.
Technical Completion Reports.
Paper weston.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/wrc/tcr/weston
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