Abstract

This study presents a novel algal-based toxicity test suitable for simple and rapid assessment of heavy metal (Hg2+, Cr6+, Cd2+, Pb2+, or As3+)-contaminated water. A closed-system kit-type algal assay was developed using Chlorella vulgaris. Toxicity was assessed by oxygen evolution in the gaseous phase of the assay kits, which was measured via a needle-type oxygen sensor. Initial cell density, light intensity, and exposure time that enabled favorable test performance for the algal assay kits were 103cells/mL, 250μmolm-2s-1, and 18h, respectively. Results from the heavy metal toxicity tests demonstrate that Hg2+, Cr6+, Cd2+, and Pb2+ are more toxic in inhibiting algal photosynthetic activity than As3+. The 18h half-maximum effective concentrations (EC50) for Hg2+, Cr6+, Cd2+, Pb2+, and As3+ were determined to be 31.3±0.5, 179.6±7.5, 301.3±6.1, 476.1±10.5, and 2184.1±31.1μg/L, respectively. A strong correlation between oxygen concentrations in the headspace of the assay kits and chlorophyll a production indicates that oxygen evolution in the gaseous phase is able to represent algal photosynthetic activity and serve as the end-point in algal toxicity tests. High test sensitivity and reproducibility as well as an easy test protocol and rapid processing time make the algal assay kit a suitable tool for simple and rapid toxicity testing of heavy metal-contaminated water.

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