What is it about?

The objective of the present study was to analyze the effect of chronic cadmium (Cd) exposure at two alkalinity levels (63 and 92 mg l-1 CaCO3) on the antipredatory behavior of juvenile silver catfish (Rhamdia quelen) exposed to conspecific skin extract and predator odor. At an alkalinity of 63 mg l-1 CaCO3, 30 days of exposure to either 4.5 or 8.0 lg l-1 Cd impaired the catfish’s antipredatory response to alarm cues. However, silver catfish exposed to 4.5 lg l-1 Cd at an alkalinity of 92 mg l-1 CaCO3 responded to skin extract and predator odor. In catfish exposed to 8.0 lg l-1 Cd at the same alkalinity, only the number of feeding bites decreased, and this occurred only for specimens exposed to predator odor. Our results show that higher alkalinity protected against the deleterious effects of Cd on alarm cue detection but only in the larvae exposed to the lowest waterborne Cd level.

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Why is it important?

In water at an alkalinity of 92 mg l-1 CaCO3, the amount of free Cd available to be absorbed by the fish was slightly lower, but probably the lower toxicity observed at this alkalinity was not due solely to metal complexation.

Perspectives

Other mechanisms, in addition to metal complexation, must be involved in the lower Cd toxicity observed at higher alkalinity levels, and further studies are needed to explain these results.

Dr Carlos E Copatti
Universidade Federal da Bahia

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Protective Effect of High Alkalinity Against the Deleterious Effects of Chronic Waterborne Cadmium Exposure on the Detection of Alarm Cues by Juvenile Silver Catfish (Rhamdia quelen), Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology, February 2009, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s00244-009-9291-1.
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