4.5 Article

AQUATIC TOXICITY OF MAGNESIUM SULFATE, AND THE INFLUENCE OF CALCIUM, IN VERY LOW IONIC CONCENTRATION WATER

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages 410-421

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/etc.56

Keywords

Magnesium; Toxicity; Calcium; Sulfate; Water quality guidelines

Funding

  1. Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Australia

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The toxicity of magnesium sulfate (MgSO4), and the influence of calcium (Ca), were assessed in very soft freshwater (natural Magela Creek water [NMCW]) using six freshwater species (Chlorella sp., Lemna aequinoctialis, Amerianna cumingi, Moinodaphnia macleayi, Hydra viridissima, and Mogurnda mogurnda). The study involved five stages: toxicity Of MgSO4 in NMCW, determination of the toxic ion, influence of Ca on Mg toxicity, toxicity Of MgSO4 at an Mg:Ca mass ratio of 9: 1, and derivation of water quality guideline values for Mg. The toxicity Of MgSO4 was higher than previously reported, with chronic median inhibition concentration (IC50)/acute median lethal concentration (LC50) values ranging from 4 to 1,215 mg/L, as Mg. Experiments exposing the 3 most sensitive species (L. aequinoctialis, H. viridissima, and A. cumingi) to Na2SO4 and MgCl2 confirmed that Mg was the toxic ion. Additionally, Ca was shown to have an ameliorative effect on Mg toxicity. For L aequinoctialis and H. viridissima, Mg toxicity at the IC50 concentration was eliminated at Mg:Ca (mass) ratios of <= 10:1 and <= 9:1, respectively. For A. cumingi, a 10 to 30% effect persisted at the IC50 concentration at Mg:Ca ratios <9:1. The toxicity of MgSO4 in NMCW` at a constant Mg:Ca ratio of 9:1 was lower than at background Ca, with chronic IC50/acute LC50 values from 96 to 4,054 mg/L, as Mg. Water quality guideline values for Mg (to protect 99% of species) at Mg:Ca mass ratios of >9:1 and <= 9:1 were 0.8 and 2.5 mg/L, respectively. Magnesium can be toxic at concentrations approaching natural background levels, but toxicity is dependent on Ca concentrations, with exposure in very low ionic concentration, Ca-deficient waters posing the greatest risk to aquatic life. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 2010;29:410-421. Published 2009 SETAC

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