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Contamination of organotin compounds and imposex in molluscs from Vancouver, Canada

Gastropods and bivalves were collected at 15 sites at Vancouver and Victoria, Canada between 24 May and 7 June, 1999, to establish tissue concentrations of butyltin and phenyltin compounds, to record imposex symptoms in gastropods, and to assess the present status of organotin contamination around Vancouver.TBT was the most predominant butyltin component in almost all bivalve specimens surveyed, suggesting a low rate of TBT metabolism. Phenyltin compounds were not detected in any molluscan specimens in this study.

Simple

Date (Publication)
2003
Cited responsible party
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

DFO

Colin Levings

Principal investigator

National Institute for Environmental Studies

T. Horiguchi

Principal investigator

The Institute of Environmental Science & Engineering, The Ocean University of Qingdao

Z. Li

Principal investigator

Mitsubishi Chemical Safety Institute, Kashima Laboratory

S. Uno

Principal investigator

Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo

M. Shimizu

Principal investigator

National Institute for Environmental Studies

H. Shiraishi

Principal investigator

National Institute for Environmental Studies

M, Morita

Principal investigator

2WE Associates Consulting Ltd.

J.A.J. Thompson

Principal investigator
Presentation form
Digital document
Name

Marine Environmental Research

Issue identification

57

Other citation details

0141-1136/$ - see front matter # 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/S0141-1136(03)00061-8

Purpose

During the PICES Practical Workshop in Vancouver, Canada from May 24 to June 7, 1999, we studied imposex symptoms and tissue concentrations of organotin compounds, such as TBT, in gastropod specimens, and organotin concentrations in tissues of bivalve specimens from Vancouver and Victoria. The present status and temporal trends of imposex and organotin contamination in molluscs around Vancouver are also discussed, and it will be useful to gauge the success of Canadian regulation of TBT.

Status
Completed
Maintenance and update frequency
Not planned

Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus

  • Pollution

  • Pollution prevention

Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords v15.9

  • Earth Science > Biological Classification

  • Earth Science > Biological Classification > Animals/Invertebrates > Mollusks > Bivalves

  • Earth Science > Biological Classification > Animals/Invertebrates > Mollusks > Gastropods

DFO Areas

  • North Pacific Ocean > South Inner Coast(Johnstone Strait, Strait of Georgia, Juan de Fuca, inlets and passages)

DFO Areas

  • North Pacific Ocean > South Inner Coast(Johnstone Strait, Strait of Georgia, Juan de Fuca, inlets and passages)

Language

English

Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Oceans
Environment description

14 KB

Description

15 sites around Vancouver and Victoria

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Begin
1999-05-27
End
1999-06-07
Supplemental Information

Gastropods and bivalves were collected at 15 sites at Vancouver and Victoria, Canada between 24 May and 7 June, 1999, to establish tissue concentrations of butyltin and phenyltin compounds, to record imposex symptoms in gastropods, and to assess the present status of organotin contamination around Vancouver. No neogastropods (such as Nucella lima) were found around Vancouver. Neogastropod populations could have been extirpated by severe TBT contamination in Vancouver, as relatively high concentrations of TBT were detected in tissues of Mytilus trossulus from Vancouver, and the neogastropods distributed in Vancouver might be sensitive to TBT. Recovery from imposex, however, was observed in neogastropod populations from three sites at Victoria and Mission Point. TBT contamination has continued around Vancouver, arising from continuous use of TBT in antifouling paints for vessels larger than 25 m in length; however, TBT has decreased around Victoria and Mission Point. Different patterns of TBT accumulation in tissue were observed among the bivalve species from Vancouver. The highest TBT concentration detected in Tresus capax suggested some possible adverse effects. TBT was the most predominant butyltin component in almost all bivalve specimens surveyed, suggesting a low rate of TBT metabolism. Phenyltin compounds were not detected in any molluscan specimens in this study.

Distribution format
Name Version

electronic

none

Distributor contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

Pacific Salmon Foundation

Isobel Pearsall

pearsalli@shaw.ca

Distributor
OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link

http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/science/data-donnees/index-eng.html

DFO Science website

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download https://soggy2.zoology.ubc.ca/geonetwork/srv/api/records/691cf37f-e4a5-4751-bc37-6e7133939e93/attachments/691cf37f-e4a5-4751-bc37-6e7133939e93.pdf

Contamination of organotin compounds and imposex in molluscs from Vancouver, Canada

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download https://soggy2.zoology.ubc.ca/geonetwork/srv/api/records/691cf37f-e4a5-4751-bc37-6e7133939e93/attachments/691cf37f-e4a5-4751-bc37-6e7133939e93.xlsx

Tables

Hierarchy level
Dataset
Statement

Levings produced paper copy. Fraser scanned with Fujitsu Scansnap s1500 (ABBY Finereader OCR software). Data was extracted through Adobe Reader conversion and manual entry into MS Excel.

Metadata

File identifier
691cf37f-e4a5-4751-bc37-6e7133939e93 XML
Metadata language

eng

Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Date stamp
2023-12-19T00:05:36.21Z
Metadata standard name

North American Profile of ISO19115:2003 - Geographic information - Metadata

Metadata standard version

NAP - CAN/CGSB-171.100-2009

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

Pacific Salmon Foundation

Sarah Fraser

fraser.sarahk@gmail.com

Author
Other language
Language Character encoding
French UTF8
English UTF8
 
 

Overviews

overview
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Spatial extent

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Keywords

Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords v15.9
Earth Science > Biological Classification Earth Science > Biological Classification > Animals/Invertebrates > Mollusks > Bivalves Earth Science > Biological Classification > Animals/Invertebrates > Mollusks > Gastropods
Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus
Pollution Pollution prevention

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