Effects of water hardness and pH on vanadium lethality to rainbow trout

Stendahl, DH; Sprague, JB

HERO ID

3695951

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1982

Language

English

HERO ID 3695951
In Press No
Year 1982
Title Effects of water hardness and pH on vanadium lethality to rainbow trout
Authors Stendahl, DH; Sprague, JB
Journal Water Research
Volume 16
Issue 10
Page Numbers 1479-1488
Abstract Seven-day LC50s of vanadium pentoxide for 2.5-g trout showed only a small range, from 1.9 to 6.0 mg V I−1, in tests at all 12 combinations of 30, 100 and 355 mg 1−2 total hardness with pH 5.5, 6.6, 7.7 and 8.8. Toxicity decreased from low to high hardness by an average factor of 1.8, probably because of regulated vanadium intake at the gill membranes. Hardness did not exert a major effect, probably because vanadium is present in water as various anions and does not complex with carbonates and bicarbonates as do most metals which behave as cations. Toxicity was greatest at pH 7.7, and the predominating ion H2VO−4 was apparently the most toxic one. HVO2−4 which prevailed at high pH, was calculated to be 60% as toxic as H2VO−4. Toxicity decreased at pH 6.6 and 5.5, probably because much of the metal was then present as decavanadates, which were found to be half as toxic as H2VO−4 on the basis of vanadium content. Small fish were more resistant to vanadium than larger ones, at least up to 12 g wet wt. However cumulative mortality continued to increase until 2 weeks of exposure, and incipient lethal levels were probably much the same for fish of different size, at about 60–70% of the 7-d LC50s stated in the paper. The toxicity of vanadium is similar to that of zinc except that it does not show a major change with water hardness.
Doi 10.1016/0043-1354(82)90246-9
Wosid WOS:A1982PH71000005
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English