Oyster embryo-larval bioassay (revised).
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Date
2013Author
Leverett, Dean
Thain, John
Status
PublishedPages
34pp.
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The description of the oyster (Crassostrea gigas) embryo bioassay was initially published in the ICES TIMES series in 1991 (No.11). At the time, the bioassay was used in the United Kingdom for measuring water quality in relation to coastal waters which received anthropogenic discharges. Subsequently it was applied to measure general water quality and was taken up by the OSPAR Joint Assessment Monitoring Plan (JAMP) as a technique for measuring general biological effects in water, sediment elutriates, and pore water, and is used in several countries across the OSPAR Maritime Area.
The organism response used in the bioassay is the ability of early stage embryos to develop normally and reach the “D-shaped” larval stage (at which the paired hinged shells can be seen) within 24 hours. Although the exposure time is short, it encompasses a period of intense cellular activity during which the impairment of a number of critical physiological and biochemical processes may result in poor and a.....
Resource URL
Publisher: http://ices.dk/publications/library/Publisher
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES)Copenhagen, Denmark
Series;Nr
ICES Techniques in Marine Environmental Sciences; 54Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.1Best Practice Type
Standard Operating ProcedureGuide
ISSN
0903–2606DOI Original
https://doi.org/10.17895/ices.pub.5082.Citation
Leverett, D. and Thain, J. (2013) Oyster embryo-larval bioassay (Revised). ICES Techniques in Marine Environmental Science, No. 54, 34pp. DOI: https://doi.org/10.17895/ices.pub.5082Collections