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- Title
Toxicity Changes of Heavily Polluted River Sediments on Daphnia magna Before and After Dredging.
- Authors
Zhang, Li-Ling; Pei, Zhou-Tao; Zhao, Ya-Ni; Zhang, Jing; Xu, Rou-Rou; Zhang, Meng; Wang, Wen-Qiang; Sun, Li-Wei; Zhu, Guang-Can
- Abstract
Most of the pollutants discharged into the water will deposit at the bottom of the river and may cause biological toxicity. Daphnia magna-elutriate toxicity bioassay was usually applied to evaluate sediment toxicity. However, the loss of hydrophobic pollutants during the elutriating will lead to the underestimation of sediment toxicity. The purpose of this study is to apply the optimized immobilized sediments to D. magna test, so it can be directly exposed to the sediments and get accurate sediment toxicity results. The optimized immobilized sediment was prepared by mixing 1 g sediment with 7.5 mL 3% (w/v) alginate and hardened in a 4% (w/v) CaCl2 solution. Based on D. magna acute toxicity test, the median lethal concentration values (LC50) of the spiked Cu and diuron measured by using immobilized sediment were both lower than that of using the elutriate, in which the difference of Cu-LC50 reached a significant level. The toxicity changes of sediment in the polluted rivers before and after dredging were then be evaluated by using the immobilized sediment. The toxicity of the sediments at four sites decreased from acute-toxic (pro-dredging) to slight-acute-toxic and nontoxic (post-dredging).
- Subjects
DAPHNIA magna; RIVER sediments; CONTAMINATED sediments; ACUTE toxicity testing; DREDGING
- Publication
Bulletin of Environmental Contamination & Toxicology, 2020, Vol 105, Issue 6, p874
- ISSN
0007-4861
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00128-020-03037-y