Abstract

To investigate the effect of sediment contamination on the tellinid bivalve Macomona liliana, juvenile shellfish (about 1.3 mm long) were exposed to copper- and zinc-dosed sand, and sediments collected from several contaminated sites. The behavioural responses measured included burial rate, crawling and drifting. In copper-dosed sediment, a significant reduction in the number of shellfish burying after 10 min occurred at 25 mg Cu kg −1 (dry wt). After a 96-h exposure, shellfish crawled away from sediment with 10 mg Cu kg −1 (dry wt), and when a weak current was provided they left this 10 mg Cu kg −1 (dry wt) sediment by drifting. Zinc-dosed sediment slowed burial at 80 mg Zn kg −1 (dry wt), and stimulated crawling and drifting at 40 mg Zn kg −1 (dry wt). Some of the field-collected contaminated sediments slowed burial and stimulated drifting, but none affected crawling. It appears that juvenile drifting induced by sediment contamination could play a role in determining M. liliana distributions.

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