Effects of polyaluminium chloride on the freshwater invertebrate Daphnia magna |
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Authors: | Daniel Jančula Přemysl Mikula Blahoslav Maršálek |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute of Botany , Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic , Brno , Czech Republic jancula@sinice.cz;3. Institute of Botany , Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic , Brno , Czech Republic |
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Abstract: | In a number of countries across the world, aluminium in the form of polyaluminium chloride has been used in the treatment of freshwaters for the direct removal of cyanobacteria, or phosphorus removal, but knowledge about its effect on zooplankton species is poor. In our study, polyaluminium chloride toxicity was tested on both artificial and natural freshwaters for a better understanding and prediction of effects in real ecosystems. Our results indicate that prediction of effects in a real ecosystem based on standard ISO methods is insufficient, and tests with nontarget species (including invertebrates) should be done before each treatment using the water samples from the treated location. Effective concentrations of polyaluminium chloride can differ markedly according to the type of water composition used in the assay. Our experiments proved that EC50 values can fluctuate between 9.89 and 54.29 mg·L?1 of Al3+, and the toxicity is dominantly dependent on the treated water conductivity. This parameter seems to be the dominant source of different effects on zooplankton species after treatment and thus should be properly tested before each use of polyaluminium chloride as a treatment compound. |
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Keywords: | polyaluminium chloride PAX18 removal cyanobacteria bloom |
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