Toxicity of sixty-three metals and metalloids to Hyalella azteca at two levels of water hardness

Borgmann, U; Couillard, Y; Doyle, P; Dixon, DG

HERO ID

75513

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2005

Language

English

PMID

15779765

HERO ID 75513
In Press No
Year 2005
Title Toxicity of sixty-three metals and metalloids to Hyalella azteca at two levels of water hardness
Authors Borgmann, U; Couillard, Y; Doyle, P; Dixon, DG
Journal Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Volume 24
Issue 3
Page Numbers 641-652
Abstract The toxicity of all atomically stable metals in the periodic table, excluding Na, Mg, K, and Ca, was measured in one-week exposures using the freshwater amphipod Hyalella azteca in both Lake Ontario, Canada, and soft water (10% Lake Ontario). Metals were added as atomic absorption standards (63 metals), and also as anion salts for 10 metals. Lethal concentrations resulting in 50% mortality (LC50s) were obtained for 48 of the metals tested; the rest were not toxic at 1,000 Ág/L. The most toxic metals on a molar basis were Cd, Ag, Pb, Hg, Cr (anion), and Tl, with nominal LC50s ranging from 5 to 58 nmol/L (1 to 58 nmol/L measured). These metals were followed by U, Co, Os, Se (anion), Pt, Lu, Cu, Ce, Zn, Pr, Ni, and Yb with nominal LC50s ranging from 225 to 1,500 nmol/L (88û1,300 nmol/L measured). Most metals were similarly or slightly more toxic in soft water, but Al, Cr, Ge, Pb, and U were >17-fold more toxic in soft water; Pd was less toxic in soft water. Atomic absorption (AA) standards of As and Se in acid had similar toxicity as anions, Sb was more toxic as the AA standard, and Cr and Mn were more toxic as anions. One-week LC50s for H. azteca correlate strongly with three-week LC50s and three-week effect concentrations resulting in 50% reduction in reproduction (EC50s) in Daphnia magna.
Doi 10.1897/04-177R.1
Pmid 15779765
Wosid WOS:000227120900020
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Relationship(s)