Speciation of nickel and its toxicity to Chlorella sp. in the presence of three distinct dissolved organic matter (DOM)

Nickel is often a metal of interest in regulatory settings given its increasing prevalence in disturbed freshwaters and as a known toxicant to fish and algae. Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is a toxicity modifying factor for nickel and a ubiquitous water physicochemical parameter. This study investi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2021-06, Vol.273, p.128454, Article 128454
Hauptverfasser: Macoustra, Gabriella K., Jolley, Dianne F., Stauber, Jenny L., Koppel, Darren J., Holland, Aleicia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nickel is often a metal of interest in regulatory settings given its increasing prevalence in disturbed freshwaters and as a known toxicant to fish and algae. Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is a toxicity modifying factor for nickel and a ubiquitous water physicochemical parameter. This study investigated the effect of DOM concentration and source on the chronic toxicity of nickel to Chlorella sp. using three DOM at two concentrations (3.1 ± 1.8 and 12 ± 1.3 mg C/L). Nickel toxicity to Chlorella sp. was not strongly influenced by DOM concentration. In the absence of DOM, the 72-h EC50 for Chlorella sp. was 120 μg Ni/L. In the low DOM treatment, nickel toxicity was either unchanged or slightly increased (87–140 μg Ni/L) and unchanged or slightly decreased in the high DOM treatment (130–240 μg Ni/L). DOM source also had little effect on nickel toxicity, the largest differences in nickel toxicity occurring in the high DOM treatment. Labile nickel (measured by diffusive gradients in thin-films, DGT) followed strong linear relationships with dissolved nickel (R2 > 0.97). DOM concentration and source had limited effect on DGT-labile nickel. DGT-labile nickel decreased with increasing DOM concentration for only one of the three DOM. Modelled labile nickel concentrations (expressed as maximum dynamic concentrations, cdynmax) largely agreed with DGT-labile nickel and suggested that toxicity is explained by free Ni2+ concentrations. This study confirms that nickel toxicity is largely unaffected by DOM concentration or source and that both measured (DGT) and modelled (cdynmax and free Ni2+) nickel concentrations can explain nickel toxicity. [Display omitted] •Ni toxicity to Chlorella sp. was partially ameliorated by DOM concentration or source.•Ni speciation and lability techniques were explored and compared to Ni toxicity.•Free Ni2+ toxicity was similar in the presence of different DOM concentrations and sources.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.128454