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Acute Toxicity of Methyl-Parathion in Wetland Mesocosms: Assessing the Influence of Aquatic Plants Using Laboratory Testing with Hyalella azteca
被引:0
|作者:
R. Schulz
M. T. Moore
E. R. Bennett
C. D. Milam
J. L. Bouldin
J. L. Farris
S. Smith
C. M. Cooper
机构:
[1] USDA-Agricultural Research Service,
[2] National Sedimentation Laboratory,undefined
[3] P.O. Box 1157,undefined
[4] Oxford,undefined
[5] Mississippi 38655,undefined
[6] GLIER,undefined
[7] University of Windsor,undefined
[8] Windsor,undefined
[9] Ontario,undefined
[10] N9B 3P4,undefined
[11] Environmental Science Program,undefined
[12] Arkansas State University,undefined
[13] P.O. Box 847,undefined
[14] State University,undefined
[15] Arkansas 72467,undefined
来源:
关键词:
Acute Toxicity;
Aquatic Plant;
Emergent Vegetation;
Vegetate Wetland;
Runoff Event;
D O I:
暂无
中图分类号:
学科分类号:
摘要:
Methyl-parathion (MeP) was introduced into constructed wetlands for the purpose of assessing the importance of distance from the source of contamination and the role of emergent vegetation on the acute toxicity to Hyalella azteca (Crustacea: Amphipoda). A vegetated (90% cover: mainly Juncus effuses) and a nonvegetated wetland (each with a water body of 50 × 5.5 × 0.2 m) were each exposed to a simulated MeP storm runoff event. H. azteca was exposed for 48 h in the laboratory to water samples taken from the wetlands at a distance of 5, 10, 20, and 40 m from the pesticide inlet 3 h, 24 h, 96 h, and 10 days following application. Methyl-parathion was detected throughout the nonvegetated wetland, whereas the pesticide was only transported halfway through the vegetated wetland. A repeated-measure three-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) using time, location, and vegetation indicated significantly lower toxicity in the vegetated wetland. Furthermore, the mortality decreased significantly with both increasing distance from the inlet and time (48-h LC50 ± 95% CI: 9.0 ± 0.3 μg/L). A significant three-way interaction of time × vegetation × location confirmed higher toxicity at the inlet area of the nonvegetated wetland immediately after contamination. Significant linear regressions of maximum mortality (independent of time) versus distance from the pesticide inlet indicated that 44 m of vegetated and 111 m of nonvegetated wetland would reduce H. azteca mortality to ≤5%. These results suggest that vegetation contributes to reduced MeP effects in constructed wetlands.
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页码:331 / 336
页数:5
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