Experimental study on vanadium transfer in the benthic fish Gobius minutus

Miramand, P; Fowler, SW; Guary, JC

HERO ID

9674782

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1992

HERO ID 9674782
In Press No
Year 1992
Title Experimental study on vanadium transfer in the benthic fish Gobius minutus
Authors Miramand, P; Fowler, SW; Guary, JC
Journal Marine Biology
Volume 114
Issue 3
Page Numbers 349-353
Abstract The radiotracer vanadium-48 was used to examine accumulation, assimilation, tissue distribution and elimination of vanadium in the benthic fish Gobius minutus (Pallas). After 3 wk exposure to 48V in sea water, mean whole-body concentration factors were low (∼0.8). The tissue distribution of 48V indicated that 48V accumulated from water penetrates little into internal tissues, muscle or liver, and is preferentially fixed in tissues in direct contact with the sea water. Concentrations of stable vanadium in fishes collected during summer 1988 from the littoral zone near Monaco displayed the same trends. Vanadium accumulated directly from water is rapidly lost, as evidenced by a 19 d biological half-life of 48V. Likewise, assimilation of vanadium through the food-chain is low; only 2 to 3% of 48V ingested with prey is retained in the tissues of the goby. The results suggest that the relatively low vanadium toxicity observed in benthic fish by other investigators is a consequence of the low degree of uptake of this metal from food or water. The relative importance of uptake from food and from water to the vanadium levels in benthic fish is discussed in the light of the 48V distribution recorded in experimental individuals and the distribution of stable vanadium in similar samples from the natural environment.
Doi 10.1007/BF00350025
Url https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00350025
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes