| Literature DB >> 24553246 |
Yunsong Mu1, Fengchang Wu2, Cheng Chen1, Yuedan Liu1, Xiaoli Zhao1, John P Giesy3.
Abstract
Criteria continuous concentrations (CCCs) are useful for describing chronic exposure to pollutants and setting water quality standards to protect aquatic life. However, because of financial, practical, or ethical restrictions on toxicity testing, few data are available to derive CCCs. In this study, CCCs for 34 metals or metalloids were derived using quantitative ion character-activity relationships-species sensitivity distributions (QICAR-SSD) and the final acute-chronic ratio (FACR) method. The results showed that chronic toxic potencies were correlated with several physico-chemical properties among eight species chosen, where the softness index was the most predictive characteristic. Predicted CCCs for most of the metals, except for Lead and Iron, were within a range of 10-fold of values recommended by the U.S. EPA. The QICAR-SSD model was superior to the FACR method for prediction of data-poor metals. This would have significance for predicting toxic potencies and criteria thresholds of more metals or metalloids.Entities:
Keywords: Aquatic life; Chronic toxicity; Multispecies; Predictive model; Species sensitivity distributions; Water quality criteria
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24553246 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2014.01.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071