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Mussels drive polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) biomagnification in a coastal food web. | LitMetric

Mussels drive polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) biomagnification in a coastal food web.

Sci Rep

Department of Environmental Engineering Sciences, Engineering School for Sustainable Infrastructure and the Environment, University of Florida, 548 Weil Hall, Gainesville, FL, 32611, USA.

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • PCBs continue to be detected in harmful levels despite international regulations, posing risks to human and environmental health.
  • The study identifies non-trophic interactions, such as those involving suspension-feeding mussels, as significant influencers on PCB bioavailability and biomagnification, rather than just trophic transfer.
  • Results show that these mussels amplify PCB levels in sediment and crabs, suggesting that their ecosystem engineering role can reshape the coastal food web by affecting PCB accumulation and exposure through non-feeding relationships.

Article Abstract

Despite international regulation, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are routinely detected at levels threatening human and environmental health. While previous research has emphasized trophic transfer as the principle pathway for PCB accumulation, our study reveals the critical role that non-trophic interactions can play in controlling PCB bioavailability and biomagnification. In a 5-month field experiment manipulating saltmarsh macro-invertebrates, we show that suspension-feeding mussels increase concentrations of total PCBs and toxic dioxin-like coplanars by 11- and 7.5-fold in sediment and 10.5- and 9-fold in cordgrass-grazing crabs relative to no-mussel controls, but do not affect PCB bioaccumulation in algae-grazing crabs. PCB homolog composition and corroborative dietary analyses demonstrate that mussels, as ecosystem engineers, amplify sediment contamination and PCB exposure for this burrowing marsh crab through non-trophic mechanisms. We conclude that these ecosystem engineering activities and other non-trophic interactions may have cascading effects on trophic biomagnification pathways, and therefore exert strong bottom-up control on PCB biomagnification up this coastal food web.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8080837PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-88684-9DOI Listing

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