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Sediment and water phase toxicity and UV-activation of
six chemicals used in military explosives
G. Dave, E. Nilsson, A.-S. Wernersson
Department of Applied Environmental
Science, University of Göteborg, Box 464, 405 30 Göteborg,
Sweden
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Abstract
Explosives used in ammunition have been dumped
in both lakes and oceans before the potential environmental effects
of these chemicals were understood. Growing environmental concern
in society and in the Swedish military resulted in a project dealing
with the aquatic toxicology of explosives. The aim of the present
study was to assess the hazard of six explosives by determining
the acute sediment and water phase toxicity for two crustaceans
(Daphnia magna arid Nitocra spinipes). Detoxification during storage
was used as art indication of degradability (hydrolysis and biodegradation).
The effect of ultraviolet light on the toxicity of these compounds
was determined by post-exposure to ultraviolet light and determination
of toxicity enhancement. The explosives were picric acid, trinitrotoluene,
(2,4-dinitrotoluene), hexahydro- 1,3,5-trinitro- 1,3,5-trazine,
nitroguanidine, and pentyl. The stabilising agent diphenylamine
was tested in the same way. For the major explosive, trinitrotoluene,
the water-phase FC/LC50s were between 5 and 20mg 1< and the toxicity
was not significantly affected by storage of test solutions for
30 days, indicating hydrolytic stability. The toxicity was not affected
by addition of sediment, indicating that trinitrotoluene was not
bound appreciably to sediment, but toxicity decreased after storage
for 30 days in the presence of sediment, indicating biological degradation
or slow adsorption of the chemical. The toxicity of the other explosives
was similar or lower than for trinitrotoluene, but the stabilising
agent diphenylamine was slightly more toxic with ECILC50s between
0.5 and 5 mg 1. Photoinduced toxicity by ultraviolet light is known
for many chemicals including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and
trinitrotoluene. The latter was confirmed in this study and especially
for degraded trinitrotoluene. 2,4-Dinitrotoluene, which is one degradation
product of trinitrotoluene was also activated by ultraviolet light.
The toxicity of diphenylamine decreased after storage in water (hydrolysis)
and with sediment (biodegradation), but both diphenylamine and its
degradation products exhibited photoinduced toxicity. © 2000
Elsevier Science Ltd and AEHMS. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Picric acid; Trinitrotoluene; (2,4-Dinilrotoluene);
Hexogen: Nitroguanidine; Pentyl; Daphnia;
Nitocra; Hydrolysis; Biotest; Biodegradation; Photoactivation
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