Influence of Lipid Pool Size on Bioaccumulation of the Insecticide Chlordane by Northern Redhorse Suckers (Moxostoma macrolepidotum)

Abstract
An effect of the lipid pool size on the accumulation and clearance of cis- and trans-chlordane by northern redhorse suckers (Moxostoma macrolepidotum) has been demonstrated. A technique was developed using 203Hg-labeled methylmercury as a tracer, which permits the direct determination of the assimilation efficiency from food and the biological half-life of chlorinated hydrocarbons in terms of individual fish. Tissue retention of the insecticide chlordane in fish was directly proportional to the adiposity of the fish. For a fish containing 2% lipid, the half-life of the cis-isomer was 60 days and for the trans-isomer, 33 days. The net assimilation efficiency from food to fish tissue was also influenced by adiposity. These results on uptake and clearance, when used in a simple model for pollutant bioaccumulation, indicate that the steady state concentration of chlordane in fish will not exceed the concentration of chlordane in the diet unless the adiposity of the fish is high.