Affiliation: | (1) School of Environmental and Biological Science and Technology, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, 116024, P.R China;(2) National Marine Environmental Monitoring Center, P.O. Box 303, Dalian, 116023, P.R. China |
Abstract: | The utility of interstitial water concentrations of metals and simultaneously extracted metals/acid-volatile sulfide differences (SEM–AVS) in two seasons were investigated to explain the biological availability of zinc in sediments to benthic organisms exposed in the laboratory. The amphipod Grandidierella japonica was exposed, in 10-day acute toxicity tests, to clean sediment spiked with zinc to obtain nominal treatments ranging from 0.25 to 74.4 mol g–1 dry weight with respect to the molar difference between SEMZn and AVS. When the molar difference between SEMZn and AVS (i.e., SEM–AVS) was <0 mol g–1, the concentration of zinc in the sediment interstitial water was low and few adverse effects were observed for any of the biological endpoints measured. Conversely, when SEMZn–AVS exceeded 0 mol g–1, the concentration of zinc in the interstitial water and amphipod mortality increased. These data compare favorably with observations made in short-term exposures and thus support the use of AVS as a normalization phase for predicting toxicity in metal-contaminated sediments in different season. |