Avtor/Urednik     Drobne, Damijana; Rupnik, Maja; Lapanje, Aleš; Štrus, Jasna; Janc, Miha
Naslov     Isopod gut microflora parameters as endpoints in toxicity studies
Tip     članek
Vir     Environ Toxicol Chem
Vol. in št.     Letnik 21, št. 3
Leto izdaje     2002
Obseg     str. 604-9
Jezik     eng
Abstrakt     Terrestrial isopods Porcellio scaber (Crustacea) were fed for five weeks on food contaminated by 250, 500, or 1,000 microg of Cd/g or for 10 d on diets with 50 or 250 microg Cd/g food. In both experiments, fecal production rate and colony forming units (CFUs) in the guts were determined. In addition, at the end of 10 d, each distinct colony morphotype obtained in gut samples was purified and characterized. Isolates were separated into 25 groups based on morphological and biochemical characteristics. These bacterial groups were used as units for calculating Shannon equitability indices (.>) for each gut. The relative frequencies of the 25 bacterial units were determined in both cadmium groups (50 or 250 microg Cd/g food) and in the control. Cadmium-induced perturbations observed in the gut microbial communities were (1) increased number of morphologically distinct bacterial isolates in the group fed low-cadmium-dosed food (50 microg Cd/g) and reduced number of morphologically distinct bacterial isolates in the group fed highcadmium-dosed food (250 microg Cd/g) compared with the control, (2) increased or decreased relative frequencies of almost all 25 bacterial units provoked by cadmium-contaminated food, (3) time-dependent increased numbers of gut CFLTs in cadmium-fed animals (dose dependence was not observed), and (4) significant changes in community structure described by Shannon equitability indices at lower levels of food contamination (50 microg Cd/g) only. Gut microflora parameters are proposed as additional endpoints in the standardized single-species toxicity test with the terrestrial isopod P. scaber as a means of increasing the ecological relevance of the results.
Deskriptorji     CRUSTACEA
FOOD CONTAMINATION
CADMIUM
TOXICITY TESTS
FECES
COLONY COUNT, MICROBIAL
BACTERIA