Effects of intermittent exposure of marine pollutants on sugar kelp and periphyton
Abstract
Pollution in the natural aquatic environment is erratic and manifests as temporary increments of
chemical concentrations, pulses. Traditional ecotoxicological testing does not consider intermittent
exposures and does not consider the post-exposure period even though latent effects may occur.
Sugar kelp (Saccharina latissima, L.) was exposed to pulses of seven antifouling compounds with
different mechanisms of action and marine periphyton were exposed to pulses of a photosystem-II
inhibitor and a sterol synthesis inhibitor. Effects of pulsed exposure that did not appear until after
the end of exposure were observed in both systems. The pollution history of periphyton
communities was found to alter the effect of the exposure of both irgarol and clotrimazole but with
dissimilar consequences. Even brief pulses of chemical pollution needs to be considered as latent
effects may appear. Sequences of pulsed exposures are hypothesised to differ in toxicity depending
on whether the ecological mechanisms of action of the toxicants are similar or dissimilar.
Keywords: Pulsed exposure, Saccharina latissima, periphyton, sequential exposure.
Parts of work
I. Effects of seven antifouling compounds on photosynthesis and inorganic carbon
utilisation in sugar kelp, Saccharina latissima (Linnaeus)
- Submitted to Archives of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry II. Pulsed exposure of irgarol or clotrimazole affects community structure differently
depending on periphyton sampling site
- Manuscript
per.johansson@dpes.gu.se
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Date
2009-01-28Author
Johansson, Per
Publication type
licentiate thesis
ISBN
978-91-85529-26-1
Language
eng