Litcius/Paper detail

Acute and chronic toxicity of manganese to tropical adult coral (Acropora millepora) to support the derivation of marine manganese water quality guideline values

Lisa A. Golding, Monique T. Binet, Merrin S. Adams, Justin Hochen, Craig Humphrey, Gwilym A. V. Price, Amanda Reichelt‐Brushett, Matthew Salmon, Jennifer L. Stauber

2023Marine Pollution Bulletin13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Adult corals are among the most sensitive marine organisms to dissolved manganese and experience tissue sloughing without bleaching (i.e., no loss of Symbiodinium spp.) but there are no chronic toxicity data for this sensitive endpoint. We exposed adult Acropora millepora to manganese in 2-d acute and 14-d chronic experiments using tissue sloughing as the toxicity endpoint. The acute tissue sloughing median effect concentration (EC50) was 2560 μg Mn/L. There was no chronic toxicity to A. millepora at concentrations up to and including the highest concentration of 1090 μg Mn/L i.e., the chronic no observed effect concentration (NOEC). A coral-specific acute-to-chronic ratio (ACR) (EC50/NOEC) of 2.3 was derived. These data were combined with chronic toxicity data for other marine organisms in a species sensitivity distribution (SSD). Marine manganese guidelines were 190, 300, 390 and 570 μg Mn/L to provide long-term protection of 99, 95, 90, and 80 % of marine species, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

SloughingToxicityCoralChronic toxicityManganeseEC50Acute toxicitySymbiodiniumBiologyCoral bleachingEnvironmental chemistryEcologyChemistryMedicineSymbiosisGeneticsIn vitroBiochemistryBacteriaPathologyOrganic chemistryCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesEnvironmental Toxicology and EcotoxicologyFish biology, ecology, and behavior