The ecological impact of different mechanisms of chronic sub-lethal toxicity on feeding and respiratory physiology

Sub-lethal toxicity tests, such as the scope-for-growth test, reveal simple relationships between measures of contaminant concentration and effect on respiratory and feeding physiology. Simple models are presented to investigate the potential impact of different mechanisms of chronic sub-lethal toxicity on these physiological processes. Since environmental quality is variable, even in unimpacted environments, toxicants may have differentially greater impacts in poor compared to higher quality environments. The models illustrate the implications of different degrees and mechanisms of toxicity in response to variability in the quality of the feeding environment, and variability in standard metabolic rate. The models suggest that the relationships between measured degrees of toxic stress, and the maintenance ration required to maintain zero scope-for-growth, may be highly nonlinear. In addition it may be possible to define critical levels of sub-lethal toxic effect above which no environment is of sufficient quality to permit prolonged survival.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Willows, R.
Other Authors: Sutcliffe, D.W.
Format: book_section biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Freshwater Biological Association 1994
Subjects:Biology, Limnology, Pollution, Toxicity, Sublethal effects, Toxicity tests, Models, Metabolism, Narcosis, Animal physiology, Risk management, Respiration,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/22814
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