Environmental Science & Engineering - www.esemag.com - March 2003
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Greater selenium threat accompanies exotic bivalve species
Biological invasions of estuaries
have become an increasing
problem worldwide and are
known to change community
structure and function. For example,
beginning in the mid-1980s, an invading
species of the bivalve
Potomocorbula amurensis became the
predominant benthic macroinvertebrate
in San Francisco Bay. One consequence
of this has been the essential
elimination by this voracious feeder of
the standing stock of phytoplankton
from the water column of Suisun Bay,
in northern San Francisco Bay.
A paper in Aquatic Toxicology
shows another apparent result of the
invasion: an increase in selenium concentrations
in the biota of the bay.
Bivalves are frequently particularly
prone to bioaccumulate selenium in
their tissues. It is possible that P.
amurensis may have a greater bioaccumulation
ability than other bivalves,
because it is an unusually voracious
filter feeder and utilizes a variety of
food sources. However, say the study's
authors, direct comparison with other
bivalve species in the Bay was difficult
because P. amurensis has essentially
displaced them all.
However, they note that, whether or
not it bioaccumulates selenium to a
greater extent than other bivalve
species, the fact that P. amurensis has
decimated the food web of the water
column and thus shifted the community
structure toward benthic organisms
can in itself "enhance adverse effects
of selenium in the system, by expanding
the availability of a contaminated
food supply."
The highest concentrations of selenium
in P. amurensis, say the study's
authors, "exceed values that other
studies have shown reduce growth or
cause reproductive damage when
ingested in experiments by birds and
fish." Indeed, they exceed values at
which "a high frequency of adverse
effects is found" by two-fold. Earlier
studies showed selenium concentrations
in the livers of surf scoters (a
species of diving duck) seven to fourteen
times higher than those from
ducks at a reference site. Similar high
levels were found in other benthivores,
such as sturgeon and Dungeness crab.
Predators that fed from the water column,
such as striped bass, appeared to
have lower concentrations than the
benthivores.
The authors conclude "that the
invasion of the non-native bivalve P.
amurensis has resulted in increased
bioavailability of a potent environmental
toxin to certain benthivores in San
Francisco Bay. Changes in contaminant
cycling and potential effects are
yet another reason to be concerned by
the threat of invasive species in our
estuarine ecosystems."
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