Abstract

Water quality standards for cobalt (Co) have not been developed for the European Union or United States. The objective of the present study was to produce freshwater Co toxicity data that could be used by both the European Union and the United States to develop appropriate regulatory standards (i.e., environmental quality standards or predicted-no-effect concentrations in Europe and ambient water quality criteria or state water quality standards in the United States). Eleven species, including algae, an aquatic plant, and several invertebrate and fish species, were used in the performance of acute and chronic Co toxicity tests. Acute median lethal or median effective concentration (LC50 or EC50) values ranged from 90.1 µg Co/L for duckweed (Lemna minor) to 157 000 µg Co/L for midges (Chironomus tentans). Chronic 10% effect concentration (EC10) values ranged from 4.9 µg Co/L for duckweed to 2170 µg Co/L for rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Chronic 20% effect concentration (EC20) values ranged from 11.1 µg Co/L for water flea (Ceriodaphnia dubia) to 2495 µg Co/L for O. mykiss. Results indicated that invertebrate and algae/plant species are more sensitive to chronic Co exposures than fish. Acute-to-chronic ratios (derived as acute LC50s divided by chronic EC20s) were lowest for juvenile O. mykiss (0.6) and highest for the snail Lymnaea stagnalis (2670). Following the European-based approach and using EC10 values, species sensitivity distributions (SSDs) were developed and a median hazardous concentration for 5% of the organisms of 1.80 µg Co/L was derived. Chronic EC20 values were used, also in an SSD approach, to derive a US Environmental Protection Agency-style final chronic value of 7.13 µg Co/L. Environ Toxicol Chem 2020;39:799-811. © 2020 SETAC.

Highlights

  • Cobalt is a naturally-occurring element that is ubiquitously distributed throughout the world

  • It is an anthropogenically important trace metal that is used in a wide range of industrial and technological applications, including use as a component in hightemperature-resistant alloys for jet engines and a component that improves the performance of magnetic alloys and rechargeable batteries (Hamilton 1994)

  • The dissolved Co concentrations for all studies were within 20% of the nominal values

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cobalt is a naturally-occurring element that is ubiquitously distributed throughout the world It is an anthropogenically important trace metal that is used in a wide range of industrial and technological applications, including use as a component in hightemperature-resistant alloys for jet engines and a component that improves the performance of magnetic alloys and rechargeable batteries (Hamilton 1994). It is used as a pigment, petroleum industry catalyst, and as a nutrient in fertilizers. In the United States (US), Co concentrations in surface waters ranged from less than 0.1 to greater than 1000 μg/L where the highest values were from small streams contaminated by mining (Mebane et al 2015).

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call