The interactions of water hardness and pH with the acute toxicity of zinc to the brown trout, Salmo trutta L. |
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Authors: | N C Everall N A A Macfarlane † R W Sedgwick ‡ |
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Institution: | Trent Polytechnic, Department of Life Sciences, Clifton Lane, Nottingham NG118NS, U.K.;Severn Trent Water Authority, District Fisheries Office, Shelton, Shrewsbury SY3 8BJ, U.K. |
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Abstract: | Exposure of brown trout, Salmo trutta , to zinc under continuous flow conditions over 96 h showed that both water hardness and pH exert major influences on the toxicity of the metal. 96-h LC50 values for total zinc ranged from <0.14mg 1?1 in alkaline soft water (pH 8; lOmg 1?1 as CaCO3) to 3.20 mg 1?1 in acidic hard water (pH 5; 204 mg 1?1 as CaCO3). A variable reduction in zinc toxicity in hard water compared with soft water over the pH range 4–9 was attributed to high external calcium. Zinc toxicity was positively correlated with decreasing acidity over the pH range 5–7, the metal being most toxic at pH 8–9 where metal complexes predominate. Below pH 5 metal toxicity also increased, irrespective of hardness. Water hardness and pH interacted with zinc toxicity in a complex manner, apparently dependent on physical and chemical transformations of the metal, and as changes in uptake. detoxification and excretion by the fish. |
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Keywords: | brown trout zinc toxicity pH water hardness |
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