| Literature DB >> 26155961 |
Mateusz Sobczyk1, Klaudia Michno2, Paulina Kosztyła3,2, Daniel Stec2, Łukasz Michalczyk2.
Abstract
The acute toxicity of ammonia on Thulinius ruffoi (Bertolani, 1981), a eutardigrade isolated from a small waste water treatment plant (WWTP) in Poland, was estimated. Our results show that no active individuals survived a 24 h exposure to solutions equal to or higher than 125 mg/L of total ammonia nitrogen (NH3-N + NH4 (+)-N), which, under the conditions in our experiment, was equivalent to 1.17 mg/L of un-ionised ammonia (NH3). The LC50 concentration of total ammonia nitrogen was equal to 52 mg/L (or 0.65 mg/L un-ionised ammonia). Given that the norms for the concentration of ammonia in treated waters leaving WWTPs are usually several times lower than the LC50 for T. ruffoi, this species does not seem to be a good bioindicator candidate for WWTPs. In this paper we also note that various ecotoxicological studies use different methodological approaches and we suggest that a more uniform methodology may aid interspecific comparisons of LC50 values.Entities:
Keywords: Acute toxicity; LC50; NH3; NH4 +; Tardigrada
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26155961 PMCID: PMC4646929 DOI: 10.1007/s00128-015-1593-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull Environ Contam Toxicol ISSN: 0007-4861 Impact factor: 2.151
Means ± 95 % CIs for estimates of ammonia LC50 for Thulinius ruffoi (Bertolani, 1981) expressed in four measures of ammonia concentration (at pH 7.4 and temperature 16°C)
| Measure of nitrogen concentration in the solution | Lower 95 % CI (mg/L) | Mean LC50 (mg/L) | Upper 95 % CI (mg/L) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total ammonia nitrogen (NH3–N + NH4 +–N) | 46.66 | 51.98 | 57.89 |
| Total ammonia (NH3 + NH4 +) | 60.22 | 67.08 | 74.71 |
| Un-ionised ammonia nitrogen (NH3–N) | 0.45 | 0.51 | 0.56 |
| Un-ionised ammonia (NH3) | 0.59 | 0.65 | 0.73 |
A comparison of the sensitivity of various species to total ammonia nitrogen (NH3–N + NH4 +–N) from the literature with data for Thulinius ruffoi obtained in the present study (in bold)
| Species (phylum) | LC50 concentration (NH3–N + NH4 +–N mg/L) | Exposure time (h) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 20 | 48 | Puigagut et al. ( |
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| 33 | 24 | Klimek et al. ( |
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| 41 | 24 | Sampaio et al. ( |
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| 50 | 48 | Puigagut et al. ( |
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| 80 | 48 | Puigagut et al. ( |
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| 344 | 24 | Klimek et al. ( |
Taxa are listed from most to least sensitive to ammonia. Please note that the LC50 for three of five ciliate species was measured after a 48 h exposure, thus their LC50 values would be probably higher for a 24 h exposure
A comparison of the sensitivity of various species to un-ionised ammonia (NH3) from the literature with data for Thulinius ruffoi obtained in the present study (in bold)
| Species (phylum) | LC50 concentration (NH3 mg/L) | Exposure time (h) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 0.28 | 24 | Herbert and Shurben ( |
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| 0.70 | 24 | Herbert and Shurben ( |
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| 0.95 | 24 | Sampaio et al. ( |
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| 1.23 | 24 | Alonso and Camargo ( |
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| 1.59 | 24 | Xiang et al. ( |
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| 2.64 | 24 | Williams et al. ( |
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| 3.21 | 24 | Snell and Janssen ( |
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| 8.20 | 24 | Khatami et al. ( |
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| 10.09 | 24 | Xu et al. ( |
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| 17.70 | 24 | Snell and Janssen ( |
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| 18.63 | 96 | Di Marzio et al. ( |
Taxa are listed from most to least sensitive to ammonia. Please note that the LC50 for the most resistant species listed was measured after a 96 h exposure to ammonia, thus its LC50 value would be probably higher for a 24 h exposure