Ecotoxicity of fluvial sediments downstream of the Ajka red mud spill, Hungary

Klebercz, O; Mayes, WM; Ánton, AD; Feigl, V; Jarvis, AP; Gruiz, K

HERO ID

1759633

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2012

Language

English

PMID

22772744

HERO ID 1759633
In Press No
Year 2012
Title Ecotoxicity of fluvial sediments downstream of the Ajka red mud spill, Hungary
Authors Klebercz, O; Mayes, WM; Ánton, AD; Feigl, V; Jarvis, AP; Gruiz, K
Journal Journal of Environmental Monitoring
Volume 14
Issue 8
Page Numbers 2063-2071
Abstract An integrated assessment of biological activity and ecotoxicity of fluvial sediments in the Marcal river catchment (3078 km(2)), western Hungary, is presented following the accidental spill of bauxite processing residue (red mud) in Ajka. Red mud contaminated sediments are characterised by elevated pH, elevated trace element concentrations (e.g. As, Co, Cr, V), high exchangeable Na, and induce an adverse effect on test species across a range of trophic levels. While background contamination of the river system is highlighted by adverse effects on some test species at sites unaffected by red mud, the most pronounced toxic effects apparent in Vibrio fischeri bioluminescence inhibition, Lemna minor bioassay and Sinapis alba root and shoot growth occur at red mud depositional hotspots in the lower Torna Creek and upper Marcal. Heterocypris incongruens bioassays show no clear patterns, although the most red mud-rich sites do exert an adverse effect. Red mud does however appear to induce an increase in the density of aerobic and facultative anaerobic bacterial communities when compared with unaffected sediments and reference sites. Given the volume of material released in the spill, it is encouraging that the signal of the red mud on aquatic biota is visible at a relatively small number of sites. Gypsum-affected samples appear to induce an adverse effect in some bioassays (Sinapis alba and Heterocypris incongruens), which may be a feature of fine grain size, limited nutrient supply and greater availability of trace contaminants in the channel reaches that are subject to intense gypsum dosing. Implications for monitoring and management of the spill are discussed.
Doi 10.1039/c2em30155e
Pmid 22772744
Wosid WOS:000306852100005
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English