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- Title
Dietary exposure of mink ( Mustela vison) to fish from the upper Hudson River, New York, USA: Effects on reproduction and offspring growth and mortality.
- Authors
Bursian, Steven J.; Kern, John; Remington, Richard E.; Link, Jane E.; Fitzgerald, Scott D.
- Abstract
The effects of feeding farm-raised mink ( Mustela vison) diets containing polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-contaminated fish from the upper Hudson River (New York, USA) on adult reproductive performance and kit growth and mortality were evaluated. Diets contained 2.5 to 20% Hudson River fish, providing 0.72 to 6.1 µg ∑PCBs/g feed (4.8-38 pg toxic equivalents [TEQWHO 2005]/g feed). The percentage of stillborn kits per litter was significantly increased by dietary concentrations of 4.5 µg ∑PCBs/g feed (28 pg TEQWHO 2005/g feed) and greater. All offspring exposed to dietary concentrations of 4.5 and 6.1 µg ∑PCBs/g feed (28 and 38 pg TEQWHO 2005/g feed) died by 10 weeks of age, and all offspring exposed to 1.5 and 2.8 µg ∑PCBs/g feed (10 and 18 pg TEQWHO 2005/g feed) died by 31 weeks of age, leaving juveniles in the control and 0.72 µg ∑PCBs/g feed (0.41- and 4.8 pg TEQWHO 2005/g feed) groups only. The dietary concentration predicted to result in 20% kit mortality (LC20) at six weeks of age was 0.34 µg ∑PCBs/g feed (2.6 pg TEQWHO 2005/g feed). The corresponding maternal hepatic concentration was 0.80 µg ∑PCBs/g liver, wet weight (13 pg TEQWHO 2005/g liver, wet wt). Mink residing in the upper Hudson River would be expected to consume species of fish that contain an average of 4.0 µg ∑PCBs/g tissue. Thus, a daily diet composed of less than 10% Hudson River fish could provide a dietary concentration of ∑PCBs that resulted in 20% kit mortality in the present study. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 2013;32:780-793. © 2013 SETAC
- Subjects
HUDSON River (N.Y. &; N.J.); NEW York (State); MINKS; CONTAMINATION of edible fish; POLYCHLORINATED biphenyls; MORTALITY; REPRODUCTION
- Publication
Environmental Toxicology & Chemistry, 2013, Vol 32, Issue 4, p780
- ISSN
0730-7268
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/etc.2110