| Literature DB >> 29392106 |
Anja Coors1, Pia Vollmar1, Jennifer Heim1,2, Frank Sacher3, Anja Kehrer4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Biocidal products are mixtures of one or more active substances (a.s.) and a broad range of formulation additives. There is regulatory guidance currently under development that will specify how the combined effects of the a.s. and any relevant formulation additives shall be considered in the environmental risk assessment of biocidal products. The default option is a component-based approach (CBA) by which the toxicity of the product is predicted from the toxicity of 'relevant' components using concentration addition. Hence, unequivocal and practicable criteria are required for identifying the 'relevant' components to ensure protectiveness of the CBA, while avoiding unnecessary workload resulting from including by default components that do not significantly contribute to the product toxicity. The present study evaluated a set of different criteria for identifying 'relevant' components using confidential information on the composition of 21 wood preservative products. Theoretical approaches were complemented by experimentally testing the aquatic toxicity of seven selected products.Entities:
Keywords: Additives; Biocides; Joint toxicity; Mixtures; Wood preservatives
Year: 2018 PMID: 29392106 PMCID: PMC5773622 DOI: 10.1186/s12302-017-0130-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Eur ISSN: 2190-4715 Impact factor: 5.893
Active substances, formulation type, labelling as hazardous to the environment according to product safety data sheets, and relative contribution of all additives with available data to the combined product toxicity predicted by CA for the most sensitive end point (in brackets) for each of the wood preservative products
| Product | Formulation | Active substances | Product labelled as hazardous to the environment (# HAZ) | Relative contribution (%STU) of additives to the predicted combined product toxicity (most sensitive end point) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | S | Dichlofluanid (F) | No (0) | 11.5 (fish) |
| 2 | S | IPBC (F) | No (0) | 58.5 (algae) |
| 3 | W | IPBC (F), tebuconazole (F) | Yes (1) | 37.1 (algae) |
| 4 | S | Tebuconazole (F) | Yes (3) | 99.8 (algae) |
| 5 | W | Boric acid and tetraborate (F, I) | No (0) | 34.8 (algae) |
|
| W | Boric acid and tetraborate (F, I) | No (0) | 91.6 (algae) |
| 7 | S | IPBC (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (0) | 81.9 (daphnid) |
| 8 | W | IPBC (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (0) | 0.3 (algae) |
| 9 | S | IPBC (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (1) | 62.1 (algae) |
|
| W | IPBC (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (0) | 0.6 (algae) |
| 11 | W | IPBC (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (1) | 3.8 (algae) |
| 12 | W | IPBC (F), propiconazole (F) | No (0) | 0.3 (algae) |
| 13 | S | IPBC (F), propiconazole (F) | No (0) | 81.9 (daphnid) |
|
| W | IPBC (F), tebuconazole (F) | Yes (0) | 1.6 (algae) |
| 15 | S | IPBC (F), tebuconazole (F) | No (1) | 83.5 (daphnid) |
|
| W | IPBC (F), tebuconazole (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (3) | 31.1 (algae) |
| 17 | W | IPBC (F), tebuconazole (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (0) | 1.3 (algae) |
| 18 | W | IPBC (F), tebuconazole (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (0) | 5.7 (algae) |
| 19 | S | IPBC (F), tebuconazole (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (0) | 90.5 (daphnid) |
|
| W | IPBC (F), tebuconazole (F), propiconazole (F) | Yes (0) | 1.0 (algae) |
| 21 | W | Boric acid (F,I), fenoxycarb (I), propiconazole (F), fenpropimorph (F) | Yes (0) | 97.4 (algae) |
|
| W | Cypermethrin (I) | Yes (0) | 0.01 (fish) |
|
| W | Permethrin (I) | Yes (0) | < 0.01 (daphnid) |
For products 1–21, mixture toxicity predictions are based on all compounds including confidential additives for which data were available, while for products 22 and 23 predictions relate only to the a.s. and the additives identified in the product safety data sheets. Products indicated in italics were selected for the experimental testing
S solvent based, W water based, F fungicide, I insecticide, # HAZ number of additives labelled as hazardous (or dangerous) to the environment on the product SDS
Fig. 1Venn diagram of the three different categories applied to identify additives in the first 21 wood preservative products tentatively as relevant for component-based mixture assessment. a Not considering ready biodegradability; b considering ready biodegradability for the ‘CLP’ category
Additives in the 21 wood preservative products labelled as hazardous to the environment on the safety data sheet of the respective product
| Additive | CAS | Content in product (% w/w) | Categorized as ‘CLP’ | Range of % STU (most sensitive species) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3-(2 | 127519-17-9 | < 1 | No | 0.1–0.5 |
| Cobalt 2-ethyl hexanoate | 13586-82-8 | < 0.5 | Yes | 0–0.4b |
| Cobalt bis(2-ethyl hexanoate) | 136-52-7 | < 1 | Yes | 0–8.0b |
| Cobalt borate neodecanoate | 68457-13-6 | < 0.5 | Yes | 0–29.0 |
| Cocodimethylamine | 61788-93-0 | < 0.1 | Yes | n.d.–17.4a,b |
| 4,5-Dichloro-2-octylisothiazolinoned | 64359-81-5 | < 0.5 | Yes | 56.5–88.8 |
| Nonoxynol-10 phosphate | 51609-41-7 | < 0.5 | No | n.d.a,b,c |
| Naphtha | 64742-94-5 | < 0.5 | No | 0.1 |
| 61790-85-0 | < 0.1 | No | n.d.–2.3a | |
| 90367-27-4 | < 0.5 | Yes | 26.5–53.2 |
n.d. not determined
aNo data available for algae; bno data available for daphnia; cno data available for fish; d authorized as active substance in the meantime
Wood preservative products selected for experimental testing and number of components (among the known ones) that were identified as potentially relevant for the mixture assessment in the three different categories and their combinations
| Product | Active substances | HAZ & CLP & > 10% STU | Only HAZ & CLP | Only CLP & > 10% STU | Only HAZ | Only CLP | Only > 10% STU | None of categories | No data |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | 2 | – | – | 1a | – | – | – | 1 | 0 |
| 10 | 2 | – | – | – | – | – | 2 | 3 | 5 |
| 14 | 2 | – | – | – | – | 1a | – | 3 | 5 |
| 16 | 3 | 2b | – | – | 1 | 1c | – | 7 | 1 |
| 20 | 3 | – | – | 1a | – | 1a | – | 11 | 3 |
| 22 | 1 | Unknown | – | Unknown | 1 | Unknown | |||
| 23 | 1 | Unknown | – | Unknown | 2 | Unknown | |||
aSolvents classified as readily biodegradable; b additive not classified as readily biodegradable; c additive classified as readily biodegradable
Fig. 2Model deviation ratios for the seven experimentally investigated products based on the predicted and observed toxicity in green algae (ErC50), Daphnia magna (EC50), and fish embryos (LC50). Symbols for the most sensitive end point for each product are enlarged. a Based only on the a.s. using measured concentrations in the test solutions; b based only on the a.s., assuming maximum allowed concentrations in the products; c based on the a.s. and all additives categorized as ‘HAZ’ or ‘CLP’, assuming maximum allowed concentrations in the products; d based on the a.s. and all additives for which at least one end point of aquatic toxicity was available, assuming maximum allowed concentrations in the products
Calculation of the predicted EC50 for a product considering only the a.s. at their maximum allowed concentrations (nominal concentrations) and calculation of the observed and predicted EC50 values considering concentrations of the a.s. measured at three concentration levels in a fish embryo test at test start (initial concentrations)
| Parameter | IPBC | Propiconazole | Product |
|---|---|---|---|
| EC50 from regulatory source | 0.067 mg l−1 | 4.3 mg l−1 | n.a. |
| EC50 observed in the present study | n.a. | n.a. | 96.1 mg product/l |
| Maximum allowed concentration in the product according to label | 3960.4 mg l−1 | 7920.8 mg l−1 | n.a. |
| Nominal proportion ( | 0.3333 | 0.6667 | n.a. |
| EC50 observed in the present study, based on nominal proportions | n.a. | n.a. | 1.142 mg sum of IPBC and propiconazole/l |
| EC50 predicted by CA, based on nominal proportions | n.a. | n.a. | 0.195 mg sum of IPBC and propiconazole/l |
| MDR, nominal | n.a. | n.a. | 0.17 |
| Recovery (initial measured in percent of nominal concentration), averaged over three concentration levels | 91.4% | 84.6% | n.a. |
| Corrected concentration in product, based on initial measured concentrations in test | 3620 mg l−1 | 6701 mg l−1 | n.a. |
| Corrected | 0.3507 | 0.6493 | n.a. |
| EC50 observed in the present study, based on corrected | n.a. | n.a. | 0.992 mg sum of IPBC and propiconazole l−1 |
| EC50 predicted by CA, based on corrected | n.a. | n.a. | 0.186 mg sum of IPBC and propiconazole l−1 |
| MDR, corrected for initial measured concentrations | n.a. | n.a. | 0.19 |
The calculation in each row is based on the information provided in the rows above, using equations 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6
n.a. not available/not applicable