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Evaluating ecotoxicological assays for comprehensive risk assessment of toxic metals present in industrial wastewaters in the Republic of Korea

Jihae Park, Kisik Shin, Hojun Lee, Soyeon Choi, Geonhee Kim, Stephen Depuydt, Jonas De Saeger, Philippe M. Heynderickx, Di Wu, Jana Asselman, Colin Janssen, Taejun Han

2023The Science of The Total Environment22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Toxicity tests represent a rapid, user-friendly and cost-effective means to assess the impact of wastewater quality on aquatic ecosystems. There are not many cases where wastewater management standards are set based on various bio-based ecotoxicity values. Here, we tested a novel multitaxon approach to compare standard water quality indices to toxicity metrics obtained from ecotoxicity tests, conducted using aquatic organisms representing several trophic levels (Aliivibrio, Ulva, Daphnia, and Lemna), for 99 industrial wastewater samples from South Korea. For five wastewater samples, the concentrations of Se, Zn, or Ni exceeded the permissible limits (1, 5, and 3 mg L−1, respectively). All the four physiochemical water quality indices tested were positively correlated with Se and Pb concentrations. The toxicity unit (TU) scores indicated a declining sensitivity to pollutants, in the order Lemna (2.87) > Daphnia (2.24) > Aliivibrio (1.78) > Ulva (1.42). Significant correlations were observed between (1) Cd and Ni, and Aliivibrio, (2) Cu and Daphnia, (3) Cd, Cu, Zn, and Cr and Lemna, and (4) Cu, Zn, and Ni and Ulva. Daphnia-Lemna and Lemna-Ulva were found to be good indicators of ecologically harmful Se and Ni contents in wastewater, respectively. We suggest that regulatory thresholds based on these bioassays should be set at TU = 1 for all the species or at TU = 1 for Aliivibrio and Ulva and TU = 2 for Daphnia and Lemna, if the number of companies whose wastewater discharge exceeds the allowable TU levels is <1 % or 5 % of the total number of industries, respectively. Taken together, these findings could help in establishing a rapid, ecologically relevant wastewater quality assessment system that would be useful for developing strategies to protect aquatic ecosystems.

Topics & Concepts

EcotoxicityDaphnia magnaLemna minorWastewaterLemnaDaphniaEnvironmental chemistryIndustrial wastewater treatmentBioassayPollutantSewage treatmentBiologyEcotoxicologyWater qualityAquatic toxicologyAquatic plantToxicityEnvironmental scienceChemistryEnvironmental engineeringBotanyEcologyMacrophyteOrganic chemistryCrustaceanEnvironmental Toxicology and EcotoxicologyHeavy metals in environmentWater Quality and Pollution Assessment
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