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Title: Assessment of sedimentary Cu availability: A comparison of biomimetic and AVS approaches

Journal Article · · Environmental Science and Technology
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1021/es980615k· OSTI ID:330537
;  [1]
  1. Univ. of Maine, Walpole, ME (United States). Darling Marine Center

Sedimentary Cu bioavailability during deposit feeding is determined by both the digestive physiology of the organisms and the geochemistry of the sediments. The authors assessed the contribution of these two factors by using a biomimetic approach involving extraction of Cu with digestive fluids of two deposit feeders and one suspension feeder and a geochemical approach measuring Cu associated with acid-volatile sulfide (AVS) in sediments. Cu bioavailability determined by the biomimetic method varied among species with varying digestive physiology but all showed a marked increase when SEM{sub Cu}-AVS {ge} 0, corroborating the premise underlying the AVS method in determining sedimentary Cu bioavailability. The existence of a positive SEM{sub Cu}-AVS threshold suggests the existence of additional Cu-binding phases or mixed Cu(I)--Cu(II) sulfides in sediments. In addition, Cu bioavailable to digestive fluids was much less than that measured as SEM{sub Cu}-AVS, indicating that the AVS method overestimates Cu bioavailability to digestive fluid of deposit feeders. Incubation of digestive fluids with two Cu-bound model phases, goethite and sulfide, corroborated the relative unavailability of sulfide-bound Cu. Subsurface deposit feeders feeding on anoxic sediments may be exposed to less Cu than their surface-feeding counterparts in Cu-contaminated environments.

OSTI ID:
330537
Journal Information:
Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 33, Issue 4; Other Information: PBD: 15 Feb 1999
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English