Abstract

Marine snails excrete metals via the gut. The sediment-feeding, tower shell Cerithium vulgatum, from a polluted environment, accumulates Cr and Ni to 3500 ppm dry weight in the faecal pellets. Pellets from C. vulgatum and the grazing, top shell Monodonta mutabilis were incubated in surface and deeper anoxic layers of clean and metal-polluted sediment. Pellets retained the original load of metals and in some cases gained Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe and Ni. Effects were modified by sediment properties. Pellets of C. vulgatum are durable, membrane-bound structures and they reduce metal bioavailability to food chains by compartmentalization. Intracellular, phosphate granules bind metals in digestive glands of snails and they are excreted via the gut and faecal pellets. These granules were extracted from digestive glands of both species of snail and incubated in the same sediments. Magnesium phosphate granules from M. mutabilis dissolved but calcium/metal phosphate granules from C. vulgatum remained; they had differentially retained or lost Mn, Fe, Co, Ni and Zn according to the type of sediment.

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