Abstract

An acute toxicity threshold of 0·09–0·10 ppm added copper was determined for specimens of Mytilus edulis from the Menai Strait which were exposed to copper (as CuSO4) in a flowing sea-water system.Results are presented which show that the closure response of the mussel to added copper is a three-part process. First, a sharp adduction of the shell valves is seen at a mean total copper concentration of only 0·021 ppm, then as the copper concentration rises, ‘testing’ behaviour is observed and finally the shell valves close to isolate the animal from its environment. The complete valve closure mechanism only operates at added copper concentrations of 0·2 ppm or more. The initial behavioural reaction of valve adduction at low concentration occurred at a significantly higher mean total copper concentration (0·16 ppm) in mussels which had been previously acclimated to 0·02 ppm total copper in sea water for 10 days.

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