共查询到2条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Hunt JW Anderson BS Phillips BM Nicely PN Tjeerdema RS Puckett HM Stephenson M Worcester K De Vlaming V 《Environmental monitoring and assessment》2003,82(1):83-112
The Salinas River watershed along the central coast of California, U.S.A., supports rapidly growing urban areas and intensive agricultural operations. The river drains to an estuarine National Wildlife Refuge and a National Marine Sanctuary. The occurrence, spatial patterns, sources and causesof aquatic toxicity in the watershed were investigated by sampling four sites in the main river and four sites in representative tributaries during 15 surveys between September1998 and January 2000. In 96 hr toxicity tests, significant Ceriodaphnia dubia mortality was observed in 11% of the mainriver samples, 87% of the samples from a channel draining anurban/agricultural watershed, 13% of the samples fromchannels conveying agricultural tile drain runoff, and in 100% of the samples from a channel conveying agricultural surface furrow runoff. In six of nine toxicity identificationevaluations (TIEs), the organophosphate pesticides diazinon and/or chlorpyrifos were implicated as causes of observed toxicity, and these compounds were the most probable causes oftoxicity in two of the other three TIEs. Every sample collectedin the watershed that exhibited greater than 50% C. dubia mortality (n = 31) had sufficient diazinon and/or chlorpyrifos concentrations to account for the observed effects.Results are interpreted with respect to potential effects on other ecologically important species. 相似文献
2.
Shuhaimi-Othman M Pascoe D Borgmann U Norwood WP 《Environmental monitoring and assessment》2006,117(1-3):27-44
Hyalella azteca (Crustacea: Amphipoda), water and sediments from 12 circum-neutral lakes between Sudbury and North Bay in Ontario, Canada
were sampled in August 1998 and analyzed for 10 metals including Cu, Zn, Cd, Ni, Pb, Co, Mo, V, Ba and Ti. Statistical analyses
showed that concentrations of the metals in H. azteca, water and sediment differed significantly (ANOVA, P<0.05) among lakes (except for Zn and Pb in H. azteca and Mo in water). There was a trend of declining metal concentration, especially for Cu, Ni and Co (in water, Hyalella and sediment), with distance from the smelters indicating the reduced impact of atmospheric pollution. Metal concentrations
of lakes (water) in the Sudbury area were found to be lower compared to data from the 1970s and 1980s indicating an improvement
in water quality. Metal concentrations in field-collected amphipods compared favorably with those measured in the laboratory
in animals exposed to deep-water sediments, provided metal concentrations were not extremely low (e.g., Pb) and that water
chemistry differences (e.g., pH) were taken into account for some metals (especially Cd). In general bioaccumulation of metals
in H. azteca was predicted better from surface water than from sediment total metal. 相似文献