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Influence of body size and gender on valve movement responses of a freshwater bivalve to uranium
Authors:Markich Scott J
Affiliation:Environment Division, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Private Mail Bag 1, Menai, New South Wales 2234, Australia. sjm@ansto.gov.au
Abstract:Body size, age, and gender (male or female) are important variables influencing many aspects of the ecology, physiology, and survival of animals. However, no data are available on the influence of these variables on bivalves exposed to sublethal metal concentrations. This study tested whether the valve movement responses (measured in terms of the duration or frequency of valve opening) of the Australian tropical freshwater unionoid bivalve, Velesunio angasi, exposed to sublethal uranium (U) concentrations in a standard synthetic water (pH, 6.0; hardness and alkalinity, 4 mg/L as CaCO(3)) were influenced by body size (shell length, shell breadth, or dry tissue weight), age, and/or gender. The valve movement responses of V. angasi to U were independent of gender; the sensitivity of males to U was not significantly (p > 0.05) different from that of females. In contrast, the valve movement responses of V. angasi to U were size- and age-dependent; smaller and younger individuals (median shell length = 36.8 mm; median age = 0.7 years) were 22% more sensitive (p
Keywords:valve movement  bivalve  uranium  freshwater  size  age  gender  concentration‐response  toxicity  shell length
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