| |
|
Sediment toxicity in the Kattegat and Skagerrak
Göran Dave & Eva Nilsson
Department of Zoophysiology, University of Gothenburg,
Medicinaregatan 18, 413 90 Göteborg, Sweden
|
Abstract
Sediments were sampled from 62 sites in the Kattegat
and Skagerrak, which are located between the Baltic and the North
Sea in the Western Atlantic, during autumn 1989 and spring 1990.
From each site 5 to 6 samples were taken wit ha box-corer. After
mixing to composite samples on board, transport and storage (at
4°C for 2 to 4 weeks), the samples were tested for toxicity
to Daphnia magna and Nitocra spinipes. Immobility
in Daphnia after exposure to 16 percent sediment (wet wt)
in reconstituted standardized water (ISO, 1982) ranged from 0 to
88 percent after 24 h and from 3 to 95 percent after 48 h. For Nitocra
the toxicity, determined as the 96-h LC5O (% wet wt) at 7% salinity,
ranged from> >32 percent (nontoxic) to 1.8 percent (most toxic).
All exposures were made in duplicates and the effects obtained in
the duplicates with the same sediment were correlated to each other.
However, sediment toxicity to Daphnia and Nitocra
was not. The test with Nitocra, which was made at several
concentrations of sediment, was considered to give the most reliable
picture of sediment toxicity in the Kattegat and Skagerrak. This
ambient toxicity assessment identified three areas with toxic sediment,
(1) the Göta älv estuary (outside the city of (Göteborg)
and its surroundings, (2) the Bay of Laholm in southern Kattegat,
which is an area with periodic oxygen depletion and where repeated
mussel kills have occurred during the last decade, and (3) an area
in the open Skagerrak northwest of Skagen (the tip of the Jutland
peninsula). Sediments, which had been stored at 4 oC, were tested
again after 6 to 13 mos with the Nitocra test. Stored sediment
toxicity was poorly correlated with fresh sediment toxicity. The
average detoxification during storage was 5 times, but the range
was 3 orders of magnitude, from 17 times more toxic to 73 times
less toxic. The reasons for the observed areal and storage differences
in sediment toxicity are so far not understood.
Keywords: Kattegat, Skagerrak, sediment toxicity, sediment,
storage, Daphnia magna, Nitocra spinipes
|