Toxicity testing of heavy-metal-polluted soils with algae Selenastrum capricornutum: A soil suspension assay

A small‐scale Selenastrum capricornutum (Rhapidocelis subcapitata) growth inhibition assay was applied to the toxicity testing of suspensions of heavy‐metal‐polluted soils. The OECD 201 standard test procedure was followed, and algal biomass was measured by the fluorescence of extracted chlorophyll....

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Published inEnvironmental toxicology Vol. 19; no. 4; pp. 396 - 402
Main Authors Aruoja, Villem, Kurvet, Imbi, Dubourguier, Henri-Charles, Kahru, Anne
Format Journal Article Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company 01.08.2004
Wiley
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Summary:A small‐scale Selenastrum capricornutum (Rhapidocelis subcapitata) growth inhibition assay was applied to the toxicity testing of suspensions of heavy‐metal‐polluted soils. The OECD 201 standard test procedure was followed, and algal biomass was measured by the fluorescence of extracted chlorophyll. The soils, which contained up to (per kilogram) 1390 mg of Zn, 20 mg of Cd, and 1050 mg of Pb were sampled around lead and zinc smelters in northern France. The water extractability of the metals in suspensions (1 part soil/99 parts water w/v) was not proportional to the pollution level, as extractability was lower for soil samples that were more polluted. Thus, the same amount of metals could be leached out of soils of different levels of pollution, showing that total concentrations of heavy metals in soil (currently used for risk assessment purposes) are poor predictors of the real environmental risk via the soil–water path. Despite high concentrations of water‐extracted zinc (0.6–1.4 mg/L of Zn in the test), exceeding by approximately 10‐fold the EC50 value for S. capricornutum (0.1 mg Zn/L), 72‐h algal growth in the soil extracts was comparable or better than growth in the standard control OECD mineral medium. The soil suspension stimulated the growth of algae up to eightfold greater than growth using the OECD control medium. Growth stimulation of algae was observed even when soil suspensions contained up to 12.5 mg Zn/L and could not be explained by supplementary nitrogen, phosphorous, and carbonate leached from the soil. However, if the growth of algae in suspensions of clean and polluted soils was compared, a dose‐dependent inhibitory effect of metals on algal growth was demonstrated. Thus, as soil contains nutrients/supplements that mask the adverse effect of heavy metals, a clean soil that has properties similar to the polluted soils should be used instead of mineral salt solution as a control for analysis of the ecotoxicity of soils. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Environ Toxicol 19: 396–402, 2004.
Bibliography:ArticleID:TOX20046
istex:393833EF0344B05953627FA75104691DB474192A
ark:/67375/WNG-FT70K6TZ-G
Estonian Science Foundation - No. 5551
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:1520-4081
1522-7278
DOI:10.1002/tox.20046