OCCURRENCE OF PARALYTIC SHELLFISH POISON (PSP) IN BIVALVES, ALONG WITH MOSSWORM ADHERENT TO THEIR SHELLS, COLLECTED FROM FUKUE ISLAND, NAGASAKI, JAPAN DURING 1995 AND 1996
T. Takatani et al., OCCURRENCE OF PARALYTIC SHELLFISH POISON (PSP) IN BIVALVES, ALONG WITH MOSSWORM ADHERENT TO THEIR SHELLS, COLLECTED FROM FUKUE ISLAND, NAGASAKI, JAPAN DURING 1995 AND 1996, Shokuhin Eiseigaku Zasshi, 38(6), 1997, pp. 430-434
Thirty species of shellfish were collected at Fukue Island, Nagasaki P
refecture in July 1995 through October 1996, and screened for paralyti
c shellfish poison (PSP). Six species were found to be toxic: Pecten a
lbicans (scallop), Chlamys farreri (scallop), Septifer virgatus (musse
l), Pinna bicolor, Area boucardi and Pseudochama retroversa. In both s
callops, the digestive gland was most toxic, with the highest score of
133.8 MU/g in P. albicans. The toxin profile of P. albicans featured
the dominant presence of gonyautoxins (GTXs) in 1995. In 1996, however
, low-toxicity components such as the C (PX) group were major, as was
the case in the profile of C. farreri. In this connection, the mosswor
m adherent to shells of C. farreri contained a low level of PSP, whose
major components were decarbamoyl GTX 2 (dcGTX2) and GTX2, along with
dcGTX3 and GTX3, differing clearly from the components of C. farreri.