Refine search
Results 1-4 of 4
Field and laboratory simulations of storm water pulses: Behavioural avoidance by marine epifauna
2008
Roberts, D.A. | Johnston, E.L. | Muller, S. | Poore, A.G.B.
Epifaunal communities associated with macroalgae were exposed to storm water pulses using a custom made irrigation system. Treatments included Millipore® freshwater, freshwater spiked with trace metals and seawater controls to allow for the relative importance of freshwater inundation, trace metals and increased flow to be determined. Experimental pulses created conditions similar to those that occur following real storm water events. Brief storm water pulses reduced the abundance of amphipods and gastropods. Freshwater was the causative agent as there were no additional effects of trace metals on the assemblages. Laboratory assays indicated that neither direct nor latent mortality was likely following experimental pulses and that epifauna readily avoid storm water. Indirect effects upon epifauna through salinity-induced changes to algal habitats were not found in field recolonisation experiments. Results demonstrate the importance of examining the effects of pulsed contaminants under realistic exposure conditions and the need to consider ecologically relevant endpoints. Brief storm water pulses trigger avoidance response in mobile epifauna due to the inundation of freshwater.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effect of Preservation Techniques on the Determination of Nitrite in Freshwater Samples
2008
Corriveau, Julie | van Bochove, Eric | Bégin, Geneviève | Cluis, Daniel
In the view of accepted ideas about the preservation of nitrite in freshwater, this short note presents experiments questioning standard laboratories procedures and tries to be a caveat to experimenters looking for sole total nitrite values more than for total nitrate plus nitrite concentrations. To validate an adequate preservation technique for nitrite, we realized a series of three experiments investigating the effect of filtration, freezing and ageing on initial nitrite concentrations found in freshwater samples collected in an agricultural watershed. Experiment results demonstrate no adsorption or dilution of NO₂ ⁻ concentrations during filtration. Nonetheless, we recommend using filtration only when sample turbidity is visible at the eye to avoid any contamination with laboratory materials during manipulations. Furthermore, results also indicate that freezing samples induces a significant decrease of NO₂ ⁻ concentrations whereas the long term storage at 4°C of samples induces a smaller variability on nitrite concentrations. In consequence, we forbid the use of freezing as a preservation technique for nitrite analysis from freshwater samples and rather recommend storage of samples at 4°C for a period of 48 h.
Show more [+] Less [-]Kinetic Speciation of Ni(II) in Model Solutions and Freshwaters: Competition of Al(III) and Fe(III)
2008
Hassan, Nouri | Murimboh, John D. | Chakrabarti, Chuni L.
The competing ligand exchange method was used to investigate the competitive binding of Ni(II) by Al(III) and Fe(III) in model aqueous solutions and freshwaters. Graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry and adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry were used to monitor the rate of uptake of the Ni by Chelex 100 chelating resin and dimethylglyoxime as the competing ligands, respectively. The results have revealed that Ni(II)-humate complexes were more labile in presence of the mixture of Al(III) and Fe(III), compared to the lability of the Ni(II)-humate complexes when only one of the two, Al(III) or Fe(III), was present. The environmental significance of this work is that in model solutions simulating freshwater containing humic substances and the target trace metal Ni(II) and cations, Al(III) and Fe(III), the competitive binding of Ni(II), Al(III) and Fe(III) by humic substances makes Ni(II)-humate complexes labile, releasing free Ni²⁺-aqua complex, which reported to be toxic.
Show more [+] Less [-]Evaluation of the Ecotoxicological Impact of the Pesticide Lasso® on Non-target Freshwater Species, Through Leaching from Nearby Agricultural Fields, Using Terrestrial Model Ecosystems
2008
Abrantes, N. | Pereira, R. | Soares, A. M. V. M. | Gonçalves, F.
Terrestrial Model Ecosystems (TMEs) are frequently used to assess the potentially harmful effects of contaminants on terrestrial organisms. Therefore we have used this tool to simulate the leaching phenomena from agricultural soils, within the drainage basin of Lake Vela (Figueira da Foz, Central Portugal), and to perform a subsequent evaluation of the toxicity of the leachates obtained, after the treatment of soil-cores with the herbicide Lasso® on non-target freshwater species. Hence, standard (algae: Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata; cladoceran: Daphnia magna) and autochthonous (algae: Aphanizomenon flos-aquae; cladoceran: Daphnia longispina) species were exposed to several dilutions of leachates obtained from the application of different treatments to soil-cores collected in an agricultural field in the Lake Vela surrounds: RW-soil-core irrigated with artificial rain water; RW+L-soil-core irrigated with artificial rain water after the application of Lasso®; GW+L-soil-core irrigated with groundwater collected in local wells, after the application of Lasso®. Chemical analysis confirmed the presence of alachlor (active ingredient of Lasso®) in the leachates RW+L and GW+L at concentrations of 88 and 16.9 μg L⁻¹ respectively. As expected, the results demonstrated that the leachate RW was not toxic for the tested species. However, leachates where the herbicide was applied, particularly the RW+L, was highly toxic to P. subcapitata (96 h-IC₅₀ = 9.7%), contrasting with the absence of toxic effects in A. flos-aquae. Notwithstanding the effects on algae, the reproduction and growth of both daphnids were not affected by the potential toxicity of leachates. Nevertheless, our results were consistent with the chemical analysis and alachlor ecotoxicity data reported in the literature. Our study confirmed that the current use of pesticides in the lands near Lake Vela, especially Lasso®, combined with the specific properties of local soils, can contribute to the contamination of surface and groundwater resources, through leaching, and could compromise the weak balance of the freshwater ecosystem by affecting one of the main trophic levels: the primary producers.
Show more [+] Less [-]