Abstract

As laboratory-based bioaccumulation methods are standardized and expanded to include other test species, kinetic studies assessing the major classes of contaminants with these species are needed to adequately select the standard duration for bioaccumulation tests. In the present study we measured the uptake (28-d exposure) of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs; total and selected congeners) from field-contaminated sediment in the oligochaete Lumbriculus variegatus, mayfly nymph Hexagenia spp., and fathead minnow Pimephales promelas. Depuration (25 d) of PCBs was measured in organisms that had been transferred to clean sediment after the 28-d exposure. Uptake and elimination of PCBs was rapid in L. variegatus and Hexagenia spp. Tissue residues reached steady-state concentrations within 28 d; elimination rates and biota-sediment accumulation factors (BSAFs) of the PCB congeners were not correlated with K(OW). Uptake and elimination rates of PCBs were slower in P. promelas, and it is not clear whether steady-state was reached in fish tissues. Elimination rates of the PCB congeners significantly decreased with increasing K(OW) in fish. The appropriateness of a 28-d exposure for measuring steady-state concentrations in tissue of the invertebrates was confirmed, but further study is required for fish.

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