Science Inventory

DETERMINANTS OF VARIABILITY IN ACUTE TO CHRONIC TOXICITY RATIOS IN AQUATIC INVERTEBRATES AND FISH

Citation:

RAIMONDO, SANDY, B. MONTAGUE, AND M. G. BARRON. DETERMINANTS OF VARIABILITY IN ACUTE TO CHRONIC TOXICITY RATIOS IN AQUATIC INVERTEBRATES AND FISH. ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY. Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, Pensacola, FL, 26(9):2019-2023, (2007).

Impact/Purpose:

To investigate variability and significant differences in acute to chronic ratios in aquatic toxicology

Description:

Variability in acute to chronic ratios (ACRs; LC50/chronic value) has been a continuing interest in aquatic toxicology because of the reliance on ACRs to estimate chronic toxicity for chemicals and species with known acute toxicity but limited or no information on sublethal toxicity. To investigate variability and significant differences in ACRs, an extensive dataset was compiled to same-species pairs of acute and maximum accepted toxicant concentration values for metals, narcotics, pesticides, and other organic chemicals. The overall median value of the 503 aquatic invertebrate and fish ACRs analyzed in this study was 8, with a 140,000-fold range (0.13 to 18550) in values, and 38-fold range (2.1 to 79.5) in 10th and 90th percentile values. Median ACRs for taxa, ambient habitat media, test type, endpoint, and chemical MOA/class categories were generally similar, but in some cases extremely variable (ranges of <1 to >10,000). There were no significant differences in median ACRs between taxa, although invertebrates were more variable than fish. Freshwater organisms had median ACRs significantly greater than saltwater species and were more variable. There were no significant differences in median ACRs among chemical MOA/class datasets, however ACR variance differed significantly among MOAs. Although few significant differences occurred among median ACRs for different groups, those categories that were highly variable are at an increased risk of underestimated chronic toxicity when mean or median ACRs are used.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:09/01/2007
Record Last Revised:03/26/2013
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 162665