Ecotoxicological study of arsenic and lead contaminated soils in former orchards at the Hanford site, USA
Autor: | Damon Delistraty, Jerry Yokel |
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Rok vydání: | 2011 |
Předmět: |
biology
Hanford Site Health Toxicology and Mutagenesis Earthworm chemistry.chemical_element General Medicine Management Monitoring Policy and Law Pesticide Toxicology biology.organism_classification Animal science Darkling beetle chemistry Soil water Environmental science Orchard Ecotoxicity Arsenic |
Zdroj: | Environmental Toxicology. 29:10-20 |
ISSN: | 1520-4081 |
DOI: | 10.1002/tox.20768 |
Popis: | The purpose of this study was to assess ecotoxicity of former orchard soils contaminated with lead arsenate pesticides at the Hanford Site in Washington state (USA). Surface soil, plant, and invertebrate samples were collected from 11 sites in former orchard areas. Mean (standard deviation [SD]) for As and Pb in soil were 39.5 (40.6) and 208 (142) mg/kg dry wt, respectively (n = 11). These concentrations exceeded Hanford background levels but were similar to orchard soils elsewhere. In our study, As and Pb soil concentrations were positively and significantly correlated (r = 0.87, Bonferroni P 99%). Mean (SD) for As and Pb in cheatgrass were 3.9 (7.9) and 12.4 (20.0) mg/kg dry wt, respectively (n = 11), while mean (SD) for As and Pb in darkling beetles were 5.4 (2.6) and 3.9 (3.0) mg/kg dry wt, respectively (n = 8). Linear regressions were constructed to estimate soil to cheatgrass and soil to darkling beetle uptake for As and Pb. These were significant (Bonferroni P 0.05) were observed in lettuce survival or growth nor in earthworm survival or sublethal effects. Based on these bioassays, unbounded no observed effect concentrations (NOECs) in soil for As and Pb were 128 and 390 mg/kg dry wt, respectively. However, our range of soil concentrations generally overlapped a set of ecotoxicological benchmarks reported in the literature. Given uncertainty and limited sampling related to our NOECs, as well as uncertainty in generic benchmarks from the literature, further study is needed to refine characterization of As and Pb ecotoxicity in former orchard soils at the Hanford Site. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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