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Fate of petroleum hydrocarbons taken up from food and water by the blue crab Callinectes sapidus

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Abstract

Radiolabeled paraffinic and aromatic hydrocarbons, including benzopyrene, fluorene, naphthalene, methylnaphthalene, methylcholanthrene, hexadecane, heptadecane and dotriacontane, were taken up from food and water by the blue crab Callinectes sapidus. In 2 days, approximately 10% of the benzopyrene and fluorene were taken up from the water when their concentrations were 2.5 and 30 μg/l, respectively. When given food with radiolabeled hydrocarbons, 2 to 10% of the hydrocarbons were assimilated by the carbs, with the remainder excreted. After uptake of hydrocarbon from water or food, a major pathway for the elimination of hydrocarbon and metabolites was through fecal material. All hydrocarbons used in the study were metabolized, with similar rates for both paraffinic and aromatic hydrocarbons. More than 50% of the radioactivity assimilated by the crabs was in the hepatopancreas, suggesting that the hepatopancreas was the site of hydrocarbon metabolism. Twenty-five days aftex exposure to radiolabeled hydrocarbons, radioactivity was found only in the hepatopancreas. The hepatopancreas contained highly polar hydrocarbon metabolites, including dihydroxy-compounds and their conjugates, while blood contained both monohydroxy-and dihydroxy-compounds. No evidence was found of storage of hydrocarbons by any of the crab tissues.

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Communicated by M. R. Tripp, Newark

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Lee, R.F., Ryan, C. & Neuhauser, M.L. Fate of petroleum hydrocarbons taken up from food and water by the blue crab Callinectes sapidus . Marine Biology 37, 363–370 (1976). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00387492

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