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Anomalous bioaccumulation of lead in the earthworm Eisenoides lonnbergi (Michaelsen)

March 1, 2018

Lead concentrations in soil organisms are usually well below those in the associated soil and tend to decrease with each higher trophic level in a food chain. Earthworms of the species Eisenoides lonnbergi provide an exception to this observation, accumulating very high concentrations of lead from acidic soils. Earthworms belonging to this species were collected from strongly to extremely acidic soils at 16 sites on a wildlife refuge in Maryland, USA. A lead concentration as high as 766 mg/kg, dry weight, was detected in depurated E. lonnbergi collected from soil containing only 17 mg/kg of lead. Concentration factors (ratio of lead concentration in earthworms to lead concentration in soil, dry wt) were highly variable at the sites, from 1.0 to 83. As suggested previously, lead absorption by earthworms is enhanced in low-calcium soils. The anomalously high concentrations of lead found in E. lonnbergi are more closely correlated with the uptake of calcium from acidic soils than with bioaccessibility of soil lead. 

Publication Year 2018
Title Anomalous bioaccumulation of lead in the earthworm Eisenoides lonnbergi (Michaelsen)
DOI 10.1002/etc.4031
Authors W. Nelson Beyer, Eton E. Codling, Michael A. Rutzke
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Index ID 70195769
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center