Selecting a sensitive battery of bioassays to detect toxic effects of metals in effluents.

Autor: de Paiva Magalhães, Danielly1,2 dmagalhaes@cetem.gov.br, da Costa Marques, Mônica Regina2, Fernandes Baptista, Darcilio3, Forsin Buss, Daniel3
Předmět:
Zdroj: Ecotoxicology & Environmental Safety. Dec2014, Vol. 110, p73-81. 9p.
Abstrakt: The use of bioassay batteries is necessary to evaluate toxic effects at various biological levels. The selection of bioassays without prior testing and determination of the most sensitive/suitable groups for each impact may allow the discharge of effluents that pose a threat to the environment. The present study tested and selected a battery of sensitive ecotoxicological bioassays for detecting toxic effects of metals. The sensitivities of six organisms were evaluated (algae Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata and Chlorella vulgaris, Cladocera Daphnia similis and Ceriodaphnia dubia, and fish Poecilia reticulata and Danio rerio) after exposure to 10 individual metal species deemed toxic to the aquatic environment (Ag+, Cd2+, Cu+, Cu2+ , Cr3+, Cr6+, Pb2+, Ni2+, Zn2+, and Hg2+) and to real (steel-mill) and laboratory simulated effluents. In the bioassays, fish were the least sensitive; D. rerio showed no sensitivity to any of the effluents tested. P. subcapitata was a good bioindicator of Cr3+ toxicity, and D. similis was the most sensitive organism to Hg2+; but the toxic effect of effluents with higher levels of Hg2+was better detected by C. dubia . The most sensitive battery of bioassays to detect low concentrations of dissolved metals in effluents was the 72-h chronic test with C. vulgaris and the 48-h acute test with C. dubia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE