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Comparison of toxicity of class-based organic chemicals to algae and fish based on discrimination of excess toxicity from baseline level

Authors :
Jin J. Li
Hong W. Tai
Yuan H. Zhao
Yang Wen
Xiao H. Wang
Yang Yu
Source :
Environmental toxicology and pharmacology. 40(1)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Toxicity data to fish and algae were used to investigate excess toxicity between species. Results show that chemicals exhibiting excess toxicity to fish also show excess toxicity to algae for most of the compounds. This indicates that they share the same mode of action between species. Similar relationships between log K OW and toxicities to fish and algae for baseline and less inert compounds suggest that they have similar critical body residues in the two species. Differences in excess toxicity for some compounds suggest that there is a difference of physiological structure and metabolism between fish and algae. Some reactive compounds (e.g. polyamines) exhibit greater toxic effects for algae than those for fish because of relatively low bio-uptake potential of these hydrophilic compounds in fish as compared with that in algae. Esters exhibiting greater toxicity in fish than that in algae indicate that metabolism can affect the discrimination of excess toxicity from baseline level. Algae growth inhibition is a very good surrogate for fish lethality. This is not only because overall toxicity sensitivity to algae is greater than that to fish, but also the excess toxicity calculated from algal toxicity can better reflect reactivity of compounds with target molecules than fish toxicity.

Details

ISSN :
18727077
Volume :
40
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental toxicology and pharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....012f3f3bcbe1de3a2539d1bb673b7d9c