J. Spangenberg; G. N. Cherr
University of California Davis, Bodega Marine Laboratory, Bodega Bay,
CA
Produced water an aqueous petroleum waste which is discharged into the
marine environment, can be toxic to a variety of developing marine organisms (Baldwin et al.,
1992; Raimondi and Schmitt, 1992). Recently, it has been shown that the water soluble fraction of
produced water is responsible for the majority of bioactivity (Higashi et al., 1992; Garman et
al., Aquatic Toxicol, in press), and that this fraction primarily contains both strontium
(Sr) and barium (Ba). We have investigated the effects of soluble Ba and Sr on development in the
California mussel (Mytilus californianus) and the white sea urchin (Lytechinus
anamesus).
When mussel embryos were exposed to Ba (as barium acetate) and/or Sr (as
strontium chloride) through development to the veliger stage, only Ba exhibited bioactivity at the
relevant concentrations. Concentrations as low as 100-200 ppb were found to impact embryo
development in continual exposures. Embryos were also exposed to Ba in stage-specific pulse-chase
experiments, and specific stages of development were affected. Gastrulation was most impacted, and
this effect was not reversible following washing in clean seawater; this stage was also most
affected by produced water. Exposure of early cleavage stages (blastula) and trochophore larvae to
barium did not result in abnormal shell formation or calcification. Sr did not affect the embryos,
nor did it modulate the barium effect. The inhibitory concentrations of Ba were similar to those
found in effective dilutions of produced water. Furthermore, Ba was also found to inhibit normal
pluteus larval development, including skeletogenesis, in sea urchins. We are currently developing
an in vitro embryonic cell culture system for assessing the direct effects of both produced water
and associated divalent cations on key developmental events.