TOXICITY-BASED CRITERIA FOR THE EVALUATION OF TEXTILE WASTEWATER TREATMENT EFFICIENCY

Brazilian textile mills import wastewater treatment technologies, performances of which are generally evaluated only on a physicochemical basis. Thus, a battery of bioassays was used to evaluate the performance of an ozonation system to treat textile effluents. Comparative toxicological profiles for...

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Published inEnvironmental toxicology and chemistry Vol. 20; no. 4; pp. 839 - 845
Main Authors Cordova Rosa, Edson V., Luiz Simionatto, Edésio, Marta de Souza Sierra, Maria, Leandro Bertoli, Savio, Marcos Radetski, Claudemir
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.04.2001
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Summary:Brazilian textile mills import wastewater treatment technologies, performances of which are generally evaluated only on a physicochemical basis. Thus, a battery of bioassays was used to evaluate the performance of an ozonation system to treat textile effluents. Comparative toxicological profiles for bacteria (Vibrio fischeri), algae (Scenedesmus subspicatus), daphnia (Daphnia magna), fish (Poecilia reticulata), and plants (soybean- Glycine max, rice-Oryza sativa, and wheat-Triticum aestivum), as well as genotoxic effects (Vicia faba micronucleus assay), are presented for both raw and ozonated textile effluents. The relative sensitivity of bioassays (or end points) to textile effluents found in this study in decreasing order was plant enzymes > bacteria > algae [almost equal to] daphnids [almost equal to] plant biomass [almost equal to] germination rate > fish. No significant genotoxic effect was found. We have concluded that ozonation was relatively effective in reducing toxicity of textile effluents. Bioassays used in this study proved to be sensitive and reliable tools for determining the toxicity of industrial effluents, and thus they can be used to evaluate emerging technology efficiency.
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ISSN:0730-7268
1552-8618
DOI:10.1897/1551-5028(2001)020<0839:TBCFTE>2.0.CO;2