Passive Sampling and Dosing of Aquatic Organic Contaminant Mixtures for Ecotoxicological Analyses.
Environ Sci Technol
; 55(14): 9538-9547, 2021 07 20.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-33749267
Toxicity results from exposure to mixtures of organic contaminants. Assessing this using ecotoxicity bioassays involves sampling of the environmental mixture and then introducing this into the test. The first step is accounting for the bioavailable levels of all mixture constituents. Passive sampling specifically targets these bioavailable fractions but the sampler-accumulated mixture varies with the compound and sampler properties as well as time. The second step involves reproducing and maintaining the sampled mixture constituents in the bioassay. Passive sampler extraction and spiking always leads to a skewed mixture profile in the test. Alternatively, the recovered passive samplers might be directly used in passive dosing mode. Here, the reproduced contaminant mixture depends on whether kinetic or equilibrium sampling applies. These concepts were tested for determining the combined toxicity of laboratory and field mixtures of aquatic contaminants in the Microtox and ER-Calux bioassays. Aqueous sample extraction and spiking, passive sampler extraction and spiking, and passive sampling and dosing were compared for first sampling and then introducing mixtures in toxicity bioassays. The analytical and toxicity results show that the correct way to first sample the bioavailable mixture profile, and then to reproduce and maintain this in the toxicity test, is by combining equilibrium passive sampling and dosing.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Poluentes Químicos da Água
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2021
Tipo de documento:
Article