Abstract

While sodium hypochlorite is widely used as a disinfectant for municipal sewage effluents and power station cooling waters discharged into coastal environments, there is limited information on the potential in vivo genotoxicity of such disinfection procedures to marine organisms. Using a recently developed test system based on the marine polychaete Platynereis dumerilii, we have evaluated impacts based on embryo–larval development, cytotoxicity and genotoxicity following exposure to disinfected settled (primary) effluent from a municipal sewage treatment works (STW). Sewage samples were collected from Newton Abbot STW, Devon, UK and then disinfected with sodium hypochlorite based on standard operational procedures. Exposure of polychaetes to dilutions of disinfected sewage in seawater (20±1°C) led to a marked reduction in normal embryo–larval development (7 h EC 50 from 0.57–1.88% (v/v), n=4), with a simultaneous increase in cytotoxicity. Following the calculation of the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD), based on developmental and cytotoxic effects, the organisms were also analysed for the induction of chromosomal aberrations. This investigation demonstrated the absence of genotoxicity in polychaetes exposed in vivo to sewage disinfected with sodium hypochlorite. These observations extend our previously published studies in which polychaetes exposed to non-disinfected sewage, while showing developmental toxicity and cytotoxicity, did not exhibit any evidence of cytogenetic damage.

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