Comparative study of dissolved and nanoparticulate Ag effects on the life cycle of an estuarine meiobenthic copepod,Amphiascus tenuiremis |
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Authors: | Mithun Sikder Emily Eudy G. Thomas Chandler |
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Affiliation: | 1. South Carolina SmartState Center for Environmental Nanoscience and Risk (CENR), Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA;2. Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA |
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Abstract: | Many nanotoxicological studies have assessed the acute toxicity of nanoparticles (NPs) at high exposure concentrations. There is a gap in understanding NP chronic environmental effects at lower exposure concentrations. This study reports life-cycle chronic toxicity of sublethal exposures of polyvinylpyrrolidone-coated silver nanoparticles (PVP-AgNPs) relative to dissolved silver nitrate (AgNO3) for the estuarine meiobenthic copepod, Amphiascus tenuiremis, over a range of environmentally relevant concentrations, i.e., 20, 30, 45, and 75?µg-Ag?L?1. A concentration-dependent increase in mortality of larval nauplii and juvenile copepodites was observed. In both treatment types, significantly higher mortality was observed at 45 and 75?µg-Ag?L?1 than in controls. In AgNO3 exposures, fecundity declined sharply (1.8–7 fold) from 30 to 75?µg Ag?L?1. In contrast, fecundity was not affected by PVP-AgNPs exposures. A Leslie matrix population-growth model predicted sharply 60–86% of decline in overall population sizes and individual life-stage numbers from 30–75?µg-Ag L?1 as dissolved AgNO3. In contrast, no population growth suppressions were predicted for any PVP-AgNPs exposures. Slower release of dissolved Ag from PVP-AgNPs and/or reduced Ag uptake in the nanoform may explain these sharp contrasts in copepod response. |
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Keywords: | Silver nanoparticles dissolved silver chronic exposure nanotoxicity sublethal effect life-cycle toxicity test reproductive effects population growth model meiobenthos |
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