Abstract

AbstractSixteen 67‐liter freshwater microcosms were treated for 8 weeks with an unrefined coal‐oil in amounts ranging from 0.03 to 7 ml per week. Phenols make up 95% of the water‐soluble compounds in this oil, and dissolved phenol concentrations averaged <0.01 mg L−1 in the lowest dose and 10 mg L−1 in the highest. The microcosms were severely damaged at the highest treatment level; macrophytes, zooplankton and insects were eliminated, and the ecosystems became anaerobic. Microcosms did not recover to pretreatment conditions within 5 months. At lower dosages there were temporary effects on ecosystem metabolism, water chemistry and community structure. The most sensitive indices—community respiration, production/respiration ratio, pH and cladoceran zooplankton numbers—were affected at phenol concentrations below the lowest observable effect concentration of a chronic Daphnia magna bioassay.

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