Startseite Copper Accumulation in the Digestive Caecae of Limnoria quadripunctata Holthius (Isopoda: Crustacea) Tunnelling CCA-Treated Wood in Laboratory Cultures
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Copper Accumulation in the Digestive Caecae of Limnoria quadripunctata Holthius (Isopoda: Crustacea) Tunnelling CCA-Treated Wood in Laboratory Cultures

  • C. Tupper , A.J. Pitman und S. M. Cragg
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 1. Juni 2005
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Holzforschung
Aus der Zeitschrift Band 54 Heft 6

Summary

To investigate the mechanisms by which the isopod Limnoria tolerates copper, chromium and arsenic when tunnelling CCA-treated wood in the marine environment, digestive caecae of specimens of L. quadripunctata from CCA-treated and untreated Pinus sylvestris sapwood were examined using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and energy dispersive X-ray detection (EDX). Copper-containing granules were found to be present in the small cells of the digestive caecae (midgut) of Limnoria from both treated and untreated wood. However, individuals tunnelling treated timber contained a greater number of granules, with six types of morphology being distinguished of which only two were present in Limnoria from untreated wood. The presence of copper-containing granules in Limnoria from untreated timber may be explained by the ability of this isopod to acquire and store copper from seawater for use in enzymes and blood pigments. The increased number of copper granules in individuals tunnelling treated wood was believed to result from elevated levels of this element in the food substrate. This ability to store copper allows these organisms to tolerate this metal in the wood substrate and may explain how this organism is able to attack CCA-treated wood in service. No chromium, or arsenic, was detected in the digestive caecal cells.

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Published Online: 2005-06-01
Published in Print: 2000-10-25

Copyright © 2000 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG

Artikel in diesem Heft

  1. Species Index
  2. Author Index
  3. Contents
  4. Subject Index
  5. Yeast and Bacteria as Biological Control Agents Against Fungal Discolouration of Pinus sylvestris Blocks in Laboratory-Based Tests and the Role of Antifungal Volatiles
  6. Copper Accumulation in the Digestive Caecae of Limnoria quadripunctata Holthius (Isopoda: Crustacea) Tunnelling CCA-Treated Wood in Laboratory Cultures
  7. Chromated Copper Arsenate Preservative Treatment of North American Hardwoods. Part 1. CCA Fixation Performance
  8. Medium Density Fibreboard Manufactured from Blends of White Cypress Pine and Non-Durable Wood Species Shows Increased Resistance to Attack by the Subterranean Termite C. lacteus
  9. Role of a Labile Terpene Compound in the Assessment of the Age of a Fossil Wood from Siena (Tuscany, Italy)
  10. Neolignan Skeletons and Benzodioxanes Through Chiral Aryl Alkyl Ether Formation
  11. Use of β-13 C labelled Coniferyl Alcohol to Detect "End-Wise" Polymerization in the Formation of DHPs
  12. Bleachability of Alkaline Pulps. Part 1. The Importance of β-Aryl Ether Linkages in Lignin
  13. Solid State NMR Studies on Cellulose Crystallinity in Fines and Bulk Fibres Separated from Refined Kraft Pulp
  14. Pulping of Whole Jute Plant (Corchorus capsularies) by Soda-Amine Liquor
  15. Pattern of Alkali Impregnation of Poplar Wood at Moderate Conditions
  16. Structure and Reactivity of Lignins and Associated Phenolic Acids in Wheat Straw TMP and CTMP Pulps
  17. Thermal Reactions of N-Methyl-morpholine-N-oxide (NMMO): A General Method for Separation and Quantification of N-Methyl-morpholine-N-oxide and its Main Degradation Products N-Methylmorpholine and Morpholine by Capillary Electrophoresis (CE)
  18. The Kismet of Residual During LMS Delignification of High-Kappa Kraft Pulps
  19. Variations in Transverse Fibre Wall Properties: Relations Between Elastic Properties and Structure
  20. Application of the GAB Sorption Isotherm Model to Klinki Pine (Araucaria klinkii Lauterb.)
  21. Strain Changes on the Inner Bark Surface of an Inclined Coniferous Sapling Producing Compression Wood
  22. Effects of Chemical Modification Reagents on Acoustic Properties of Wood
  23. J.L. McCarthy In Memoriam
  24. Acknowledgement
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