A posterior gill of the common shore crab Carcinus maenas (Crustacea:Decapoda) was
used to study the effects of sublethal copper concentrations on gill morphometry, and
gill cell ultrastructure and distribution. Primarily, the ultrastructure and distribution of
gill cells in the untreated gill of crabs acclimated to 35‰ seawater were characterised.
Gill ultrastructure was subsequently shown to vary markedly at 10‰ compared to 35‰
seawater. Ultrastructural and distributional, rather than gross morphological, change
occurred in the gill following exposure to copper at each salinity. Ultrastructural studies
showed that as the length of copper exposure increased the gill epithelial layer became
highly vacuolated, the number of plasma membrane infoldings and mitochondria became
reduced, the microtubular network became disrupted, the endoplasmic reticulum became
swollen and the cell cytoplasm contained many free ribosomes. Copper exposure also
resulted in an increase in the number of haemocytes in the gill, some of which became
attached to the basal epithelial cell surface or actually infiltrated into the epithelial cell
cytoplasm. Ultrastructural change was more extensive when copper was administered
at 35‰ rather than 10‰ seawater. These effects are described and correlated with
previously documented biochemical and physiological responses to heavy metals in
crustaceans. In addition, the elemental composition of the gill granular haemocytes
suggested they play an important role in the immobilisation and removal of copper-from
the gill. This study has shown the way forward in creating a better understanding of the
mechanisms behind heavy metal toxicity in marine organisms is the use of
environmentally realistic concentrations of heavy metal administered in flow-through
seawater systems.
Date of Award | 1994 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
EFFECT OF COPPER ON THE GILL STRUCTURE OF A EURYHALINE CRAB, CARCINUS MAENAS (CRUSTACEA:DECAPODA)
LAWSON, S. L. (Author). 1994
Student thesis: PhD