Soil fauna can serve as an excellent tool for ecological assessment of soil quality. The earthworm Eisenia fetida L. is widely used as a bioindicator organism to assess the toxicity of metals, metalloids, and other pollutants. Many studies have shown that the concentrations of metals and metalloids toxic to earthworms are an order of magnitude lower in artificially contaminated soils than in industrially contaminated soils. The novelty of this study is that toxicity estimates were made using native industrially contaminated soils. The results of the two experiments demonstrate the potential use of earthworms for ecological assessment of soils contaminated with metals and metalloids due to copper mining activities in central Chile. The main contaminant in these soils was copper, but arsenic, commonly found in copper ore, was also present in the contaminated soils. In the short-term bioassay, E. fetida earthworms avoided the soil in response to increasing copper content. However, in long-term experiments, arsenic proved to be more toxic to earthworm reproduction, while copper had little effect. In this study, we present toxicity thresholds for copper and arsenic to E. fetida in industrially contaminated native soils.
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