Use of the Species Sensitivity Distribution Approach to Derive Ecological Threshold of Toxicological Concern (eco-TTC) for Pesticides

The species sensitivity distribution (SSD) calculates the hazardous concentration at which 5% of species (HC5) will be potentially affected. For many compounds, HC5 values are unavailable impeding the derivation of SSD curves. Through a detailed bibliographic survey, we selected HC5 values (from acu...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2021-11, Vol.18 (22), p.12078
Hauptverfasser: Rizzi, Cristiana, Villa, Sara, Cuzzeri, Alessandro Sergio, Finizio, Antonio
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container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Rizzi, Cristiana
Villa, Sara
Cuzzeri, Alessandro Sergio
Finizio, Antonio
description The species sensitivity distribution (SSD) calculates the hazardous concentration at which 5% of species (HC5) will be potentially affected. For many compounds, HC5 values are unavailable impeding the derivation of SSD curves. Through a detailed bibliographic survey, we selected HC5 values (from acute toxicity tests) for freshwater aquatic species and 129 pesticides. The statistical distribution and variability of the HC5 values within the chemical classes were evaluated. Insecticides are the most toxic compounds in the aquatic communities (HC5 = 1.4 × 10−3 µmol L−1), followed by herbicides (HC5 = 3.3 × 10−2 µmol L−1) and fungicides (HC5 = 7.8 µmol L−1). Subsequently, the specificity of the mode of action (MoA) of pesticides on freshwater aquatic communities was investigated by calculating the ratio between the estimated baseline toxicity for aquatic communities and the HC5 experimental values gathered from the literature. Moreover, we proposed and validated a scheme to derive the ecological thresholds of toxicological concern (eco-TTC) of pesticides for which data on their effects on aquatic communities are not available. We proposed eco-TTCs for different classes of insecticides, herbicides, and fungicides with a specific MoA, and three eco-TTCs for those chemicals with unavailable MoA. We consider the proposed approach and eco-TTC values useful for risk management purposes.
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subjects Acute toxicity
Aquatic communities
Chemicals
Fungicides
Geographical distribution
Herbicides
Insecticides
Literature reviews
Mode of action
Narcotics
Pesticides
Risk assessment
Risk management
Sensitivity
Toxicity
Toxicity testing
Toxicology
title Use of the Species Sensitivity Distribution Approach to Derive Ecological Threshold of Toxicological Concern (eco-TTC) for Pesticides
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