Science Inventory

CHRONIC TOXICITY OF COPPER TO A PARTIAL LIFE CYCLE OF THE MIDGE, CHIRONOMUS DECORUS

Citation:

Kosalwat, P. AND A. Knight. CHRONIC TOXICITY OF COPPER TO A PARTIAL LIFE CYCLE OF THE MIDGE, CHIRONOMUS DECORUS. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-87/542.

Description:

The development and hatchability of Chironomus decorus eggs were not affected by 0.1 to 5 mg/L of copper in water. he embryos developed normally and hatched at about the same time (after 55 hr of incubation). ll larvae survived the duration of the test (72 hr) except those subjected to 5 mg/L of copper in water, which died after only partial emergence from the egg shell. pparently eggs were protected by their shell from copper. rowth of C. decorus larvae was reduced significantly when they were reared in copper-spiked food-substrate (bound copper) from the age 1 to 15 days old (900-4,500 mg/kg of copper). he substrate copper concentration at which larval growth was reduced to sox (EC50) was 1,602 mg/kg. ubstrate copper caused deformities in the epipharyngeal plate of larval mouthparts and copper concentration higher than 1,800 mg/kg delayed adult emergence. he copper concentration in pupal exuviae and adults were positively correlated to copper concentration in the substrate in which they had been reared as larvae. arval stage appeared to be the most sensitive to copper toxicity, while eggs were the least sensitive. Larval growth was the best indicator in detecting copper pollution, since it could detect copper at relatively low concentrations. he time to adult emergence was not considered a very good indicator, while larval deformities offered a quick tool to evaluate copper pollution.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:04/16/2004
Record ID: 49565