Abstract

A Terrestrial Biotic Ligand Model (TBLM) was developed using noncalcareous soils from Europe based on Cu and Ni speciation and barley (Hordeum vulgare cv. Regina) root elongation bioassays. Free metal ion (M2+) activity was computed by the WHAM VI model using inputs of soil metal, soil organic matter, and alkali and alkaline earth metals concentrations, and pH in soil solution. The TBLM assumes that metal in soil and in the solution are in equilibrium. Metal ions react with the biotic ligand, the receptor site, and inhibit root elongation. Other ions, principally H+, Ca2+ and Mg2+, compete with M2+ and, therefore, affect its toxicity. Toxicity is correlated only to the fraction of the total biotic ligand sites occupied by M2+. Compared to other models using either the soil metal concentration or M2+ activity as the toxic dose, the TBLM provides a more consistent method to normalize and compare Cu and Ni toxicities to root elongation among different soils. The TBLM was able to predictthe EC50 soil Cu and Ni concentrations generally within a factor of 2 of the observed values, a level of precision similar to that for the aquatic Biotic Ligand Model, indicating its potential utility in metals risk assessment in soils.

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