Environmental Research Institute of the Supervising Scientist, Australian Government Department of the Environment and Energy, Darwin, Norther Territory, Australia.
Natural Resource Assessment, Cairns, Queensland, Australia.
Environ Toxicol Chem. 2019 Jan;38(1):177-189. doi: 10.1002/etc.4313. Epub 2018 Dec 20.
The chronic toxicity of ammonia to tropical freshwater species is understudied, and thus data on temperate species have been used to derive water quality guideline values for tropical regions. Such practices may lead to underprotective guideline values due to differences in toxicities observed between tropical and temperate species. In addition, the presence of ammonia in low-ionic-strength waters may also result in higher toxicity, and studies on this factor are limited. The present study assessed the toxicity of ammonia to 6 tropical freshwater species in low-ionic-strength waters. Because ammonia toxicity varies depending on the pH and temperature, test water pH concentrations were maintained at approximately pH 6.0 ± 0.3 at temperatures between 27.5 and 30 °C. Low-effect chronic inhibition concentrations were derived for the following species: Chlorella sp. 66 mg L ; Lemna aequinoctialis 22 mg L ; Hydra viridissima 1.8 mg L ; Moinodaphnia macleayi 27 mg L ; Amerianna cumingi 17 mg L ; and Mogurnda mogurnda 5.4 mg L total ammonia nitrogen. Two of the species tested (a cnidarian and a fish species) were among the most sensitive reported anywhere within their taxonomic group. Chronic ammonia datasets representing toxicity estimates for temperate and tropical species were plotted and compared using species sensitivity distributions. The results indicate that the differences in chronic toxicity observed between tropical and temperate species were likely due to the low ionic strength of the waters to which tropical species were exposed, rather than any inherent physiological differences between species from tropical and temperate regions. This finding suggests that tropical waters of low ionic strength may be at a higher risk from ammonia compared with other freshwater ecosystems. Environ Toxicol Chem 2019;38:177-189. © 2018 Commonwealth of Australia. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of SETAC.
氨对热带淡水物种的慢性毒性研究较少,因此,人们利用温带物种的数据来推导热带地区的水质基准值。由于热带和温带物种的毒性存在差异,这种做法可能导致保护作用不足的基准值。此外,低离子强度水中氨的存在也可能导致更高的毒性,而关于这一因素的研究有限。本研究评估了氨在低离子强度水中对 6 种热带淡水物种的毒性。由于氨的毒性取决于 pH 值和温度,因此在 27.5 至 30°C 的温度下,将测试水的 pH 值浓度维持在约 pH6.0±0.3。对于以下物种,得出了低效应慢性抑制浓度:Chlorella sp. 66mg/L;Lemna aequinoctialis 22mg/L;Hydra viridissima 1.8mg/L;Moinodaphnia macleayi 27mg/L;Amerianna cumingi 17mg/L;和 Mogurnda mogurnda 5.4mg/L 总氨氮。在测试的两个物种(一种刺胞动物和一种鱼类)中,它们是在其分类群中报告的最敏感物种之一。用物种敏感性分布对代表温带和热带物种毒性估计的慢性氨数据集进行绘图和比较。结果表明,热带和温带物种之间观察到的慢性毒性差异可能是由于热带物种暴露于低离子强度的水中,而不是热带和温带地区物种之间的任何内在生理差异造成的。这一发现表明,与其他淡水生态系统相比,低离子强度的热带水域可能面临更高的氨风险。Environ Toxicol Chem 2019;38:177-189。©2018 澳大利亚联邦。Wiley Periodicals,Inc. 代表 SETAC 出版。