Effects of soil properties on copper toxicity to earthworm Eisenia fetida in 15 Chinese soils

The bioavailability and toxicity of metals in soil are influenced by a variety of soil properties, and this principle should be recognized in establishing soil environmental quality criteria. In the present study, the uptake and toxicity of Cu to the earthworm Eisenia fetida in 15 Chinese soils with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2016-02, Vol.145, p.185-192
Hauptverfasser: Duan, Xiongwei, Xu, Meng, Zhou, Youya, Yan, Zengguang, Du, Yanli, Zhang, Lu, Zhang, Chaoyan, Bai, Liping, Nie, Jing, Chen, Guikui, Li, Fasheng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The bioavailability and toxicity of metals in soil are influenced by a variety of soil properties, and this principle should be recognized in establishing soil environmental quality criteria. In the present study, the uptake and toxicity of Cu to the earthworm Eisenia fetida in 15 Chinese soils with various soil properties were investigated, and regression models for predicting Cu toxicity across soils were developed. The results showed that earthworm survival and body weight change were less sensitive to Cu than earthworm cocoon production. The soil Cu-based median effective concentrations (EC50s) for earthworm cocoon production varied from 27.7 to 383.7 mg kg−1 among 15 Chinese soils, representing approximately 14-fold variation. Soil cation exchange capacity and organic carbon content were identified as key factors controlling Cu toxicity to earthworm cocoon production, and simple and multiple regression models were developed for predicting Cu toxicity across soils. Tissue Cu-based EC50s for earthworm cocoon production were also calculated and varied from 15.5 to 62.5 mg kg−1 (4-fold variation). Compared to the soil Cu-based EC50s for cocoon production, the tissue Cu-based EC50s had less variation among soils, indicating that metals in tissue were more relevant to toxicity than metals in soil and hence represented better measurements of bioavailability. [Display omitted] •Cu EC50s to earthworms presented 14-fold variation among 15 Chinese soils.•Soil CEC and OC content were key factors controlling Cu toxicity in Chinese soils.•Regression models were developed for predicting Cu toxicity across soils.•Cu in earthworm tissues was good indicator of soil Cu bioavailability.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2015.11.099