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American Chemical Society, Environmental Science and Technology, 1(50), p. 412-419, 2015

DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b03413

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Earthworm Uptake Routes and Rates of Ionic Zn and ZnO Nanoparticles at Realistic Concentrations, Traced Using Stable Isotope Labeling

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The environmental behaviour of ZnO nanoparticles (NPs), their availability to, uptake pathways by, and biokinetics in the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus were investigated using stable isotope labelling. Zinc isotopically enriched to 99.5% in (68)Zn ((68)Zn-E) was used to prepare (68)ZnO NPs and a dissolved phase of (68)Zn for comparison. These materials enabled tracing of environmentally relevant (below background) NP additions to soil of only 5 mg (68)Zn-E kg(-1). Uptake routes were isolated by introducing earthworms with sealed and unsealed mouthparts into test soils for up to 72 hours. The Zn isotope compositions of the soils, pore waters and earthworms were then determined using multiple collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Detection and quantification of (68)Zn-E in earthworm tissue was possible after only 4 hours of dermal exposure, when the uptake of (68)Zn-E had increased the total Zn tissue concentration by 0.03‰. The results demonstrate that at these realistic exposure concentrations there is no distinguishable difference between the uptake of the two forms of Zn by the earthworm L. rubellus, with the dietary pathway accounting for ~95% of total uptake. This stands in contrast to comparable studies where high dosing levels were used and dermal uptake is dominant.