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      Temporal and Spatial Analysis of Trace Metal Ecotoxicity in Sediments of Chaohu Lake, China

      , , , ,
      Toxics
      MDPI AG

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          Abstract

          The species sensitivity distribution (SSD) analysis for aquatic ecosystems has been increasingly used in risk assessment. However, existing analyses of the impact of trace metals in lake sediments on aquatic organisms often neglect the spatiotemporal variability of trace metal release. This oversight can result in ecological risk assessments that lack specificity. To address this gap, we collected 32 core sediment samples from Lake Chaohu to systematically investigate the ecological toxicological risks posed by the release of eight trace metal indicators into the overlying water column under four hydrological scenarios throughout the year. Results indicated that only Cu, Pb, and Zn exhibit persistent toxicological risks. The comprehensive ecological toxicological risk of sediment trace metals showed spatial differences, increasing from the western region to the eastern region, i.e., western region < central region < eastern region. Seasonally, the risk levels are ordered as follows: May < September < November to April of the following year < June to August. The eastern region in summer (June to August) was identified as the high-risk area and period for trace metal pollution in sediments. Based on these conclusions, it is recommended to implement pollution control and environmental monitoring measures in the eastern region during the summer to effectively control the pollution and ecological risks of trace metals.

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          Most cited references39

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          Predictive environmental risk assessment of chemical mixtures: a conceptual framework.

          Environmental risks of chemicals are still often assessed substance-by-substance, neglecting mixture effects. This may result in risk underestimations, as the typical exposure is toward multicomponent chemical "cocktails". We use the two well established mixture toxicity concepts (Concentration Addition (CA) and Independent Action (IA)) for providing a tiered outline for environmental hazard and risk assessments of mixtures, focusing on general industrial chemicals and assuming that the "base set" of data (EC50s for algae, crustaceans, fish) is available. As mixture toxicities higher than predicted by CA are rare findings, we suggest applying CA as a precautious first tier, irrespective of the modes/mechanisms of action of the mixture components. In particular, we prove that summing up PEC/PNEC ratios might serve as a justifiable CA-approximation, in order to estimate in a first tier assessment whether there is a potential risk for an exposed ecosystem if only base-set data are available. This makes optimum use of existing single substance assessments as more demanding mixture investigations are requested only if there are first indications of an environmental risk. Finally we suggest to call for mode-of-action driven analyses only if error estimations indicate the possibility for substantial differences between CA- and IA-based assessments.
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            Heavy metals distribution, risk assessment and water quality characterization by water quality index of the River Soan, Pakistan

              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
              • Article: not found

              Current status and temporal trend of heavy metals in farmland soil of the Yangtze River Delta Region: Field survey and meta-analysis

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                TOXIC8
                Toxics
                Toxics
                MDPI AG
                2305-6304
                December 2024
                December 20 2024
                : 12
                : 12
                : 923
                Article
                10.3390/toxics12120923
                11728552
                39771138
                ad43d9af-117c-4303-85f2-a6518ff6925e
                © 2024

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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