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Investigation of the sublethal effects of some petroleum
refinery effluents
J. P. Sherry1,
B. F Scott1,
E. Nagy2
& B. J. Dutka3
1Research
and Applications Branch, National Water Research Institute,
867 Lakeshore Road, Burlington, Ontario, L7R4A6, Canada
2Rivers
Research Branch, National Water Research Institute
3Lakes
Research Branch, National Research Institute
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Abstract
Canada, environmental regulations for protection of
the biota from the adverse effects of effluents from petroleum refineries
have tended to focus on acute toxicity. There is concern those effluents
may have other subtle, but still deleterious, long-term effects
on aquatic ecosystems. We have used a battery of toxicity tests
to assess the acute toxicity, genotoxicity, and chronic toxicity
of effluent samples from two Ontario refineries. The test organisms
included representatives of the bacterial, algal, plant, cladoceran,
and fish communities. The results of our preliminary study indicate
that the effluent samples had little acute toxicity to the test
organisms. There were indications of some sublethal toxicity to
Ceriodaphnia dubia, Panagrellus redivivus, and Pimephales
promelas. One of the effluents inhibited the growth of Selanastrum
capricornutum (IC50 of 59.9%)
and Lemna gibba (IC25 of
73.3%) and also caused a 15 percent reduction in the germination
of Lactuca sativa seeds. The SOS-Chromotest, a commercially
available test that measures the activity of a bacterial DNA repair
system, detected genotoxic tests in a single effluent that had been
concentrated ten fold. There was no apparent relationship between
several chemical parameters and the observed sublethal effects.
Further research is needed to establish whether or not the served
toxic effects are typical of effluents from Ontario refineries.
Keywords: petroleum, refinery, effluent, acute toxicity, sublethal
effects
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