Abstract

Batch cultures of the toxigenic diatomNitzschia pungens Grunow f.multiseries Hasle were fed to blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) and deep sea Atlantic scallops (Placopecten magellanicus) to elucidate conditions under which domoic acid (DA) was accumulated and excreted (depurated). Mussels accumulated the toxin to a maximum level of 13 μg g-1, at rates of 0.21 to 3.7 μg h-1 g-1, dry weight. Accumulation efficiency (the proportion of accumulated DA to estimated net uptake) ranged from 1–5%. The highest filtration rate of 1.71 h-1 occurred at concentrations of 4–8 × 106Nitzschia cells 1-1 with no formation of pseudofeces. Depuration rates between fed and starved mussels over a 2 h test period were the same. The depuration rate of domoic acid was about 17% d-1 and did not account for the low uptake efficiencies, so it is suggested that most of the DA is lost from mussels in the solution during the feeding process. Domoic acid accumulation in mussels was dependent on the amount of toxin available, which in turn was a function of the density and growth phase of theNitzschia population. Changes in filtration rate withNitzschia concentration and depuration rate with time can account for the DA levels of mussels collected during toxic episodes in Cardigan Bay, Prince Edward Island, Canada in 1988 and 1989.

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