Abstract
SUMMARY. The accumulation of cadmium from an experimental medium by the freshwater amphipod Gammarus pulex is described.Much of the uptake is internal as opposed to adsorption on the body surface, and after an apparent saturation of the exoskeleton the hepatopancreas becomes an increasingly important site of cadmium storage. The haemolymph cadmium concentration reaches a high level compared with marine crustaceans, achieving a concentration factor (ratio of internal Cd/ external Cd) of 100 after about 60 h uptake.The cadmium uptake process is severely inhibited after exposure of experimental animals to 0.5 mM 2:4 Dinitrophenol, indicating the mediation of an active process. This fact together with the negative relationship between cadmium uptake rate and the calcium concentration of the animal suggests that cadmium accumulation by this species may be at least partially accounted for by a process of ‘accidental’ active cadmium uptake, with cadmium substituting for calcium on a calcium regulatory mechanism.As yet it has not been possible to establish a true stoichiometric relationship between the two metals. Although calcium influx and cadmium uptake (influx) rates are similar over a wide range of external concentrations, calcium influx is clearly inhibited by a low external ratio of cadmium to calcium. This indicates that the relationship between the two metals is far from an equimolar one and the possibility of non‐competitive inhibition of calcium influx by cadmium cannot be eliminated.
Published Version
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