Several experiments using a self-regulated system were conducted to define
the factors likely to influence the uptake of paralytic shellfish poison
(PSP) by oysters in the Penzé estuary (France, Brittany). Each 4-day
experiment was carried out in a recirculated sea water system using 15 Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas) separated from each other and supplied with unfiltered
natural seawater containing alternatively toxic (Alexandrium minutum) or non-toxic
(Skeletonema costatum) algal diets. The food supply and exposure times to toxic diets were
determined according to field studies of the upstream and downstream
movement of patches containing A. minutum. The experimental parameters corresponded
roughly to the hydrological conditions generally observed in June when tidal
coefficients are lowest and blooms occur: (i) A. minutum concentrations in sea water
of 200, 5000 and 10 000 cell ml−1; (ii) inorganic matter consisting
of 5 and 15 mg L−1 of calcinated muddy sediments; and (iii) low and
high tide salinities of 25 and 35‰, respectively.
Significant experimental contamination (greater than the 80 µg STX
equiv. 100 g-1 sanitary threshold) occurred after 4 days of exposure for
the monospecific A. minutum diet (20-200 cell ml−1) and alternated A. minutum and S. costatum diets (5000 and 20 000 cell ml−1, respectively). Contamination levels were less
than the sanitary threshold for alternated A. minutum/S. costatum diets of 200 and 20 000 cell ml−1, respectively, and for a monospecific A. minutum diet (1000−10 000 cell ml−1). In the last case, the accumulation rate was quite low, possibly
because of inhibition of the filtration rate related to a lower biodeposit
production rate and decreased feeding time activity. The addition of
inorganic matter appeared to play a significant role in the observed
increase of toxin uptake, whereas salinity was not a determining factor for
toxin accumulation rates. These last observations were corroborated by
statistical analysis and stepwise multiple linear regressions integrating
all or some of the experimental parameters.