Additive toxicity of herbicide mixtures and comparative sensitivity of tropical benthic microalgae

Abstract: 

Natural waters often contain complex mixtures of unknown contaminants potentially posing a threat to marine communities through chemical interactions. Here, acute effects of the photosystem II-inhibiting herbicides diuron, tebuthiuron, atrazine, simazine, and hexazinone, herbicide breakdown products (des- ethyl-atrazine (DEA) and 3,4-dichloroaniline (3,4-DCA)) and binary mixtures, were investigated using three tropical benthic microalgae; Navicula sp. and Cylindrotheca closterium (Ochrophyta) and Nephrosel- mis pyriformis (Chlorophyta), and one standard test species, Phaeodactylum tricornutum (Ochrophyta), in a high-throughput Maxi-Imaging-PAM bioassay (Maxi-IPAM). The order of toxicity was; diuron > hexazi- none > tebuthiuron > atrazine > simazine > DEA > 3,4-DCA for all species. The tropical green alga N. pyri- formis was up to 10-fold more sensitive than the diatoms tested here and reported for coral symbionts, and is recommended as a standard tropical test species for future research. All binary mixtures exhibited additive toxicity, and the use of herbicide equivalents (HEq) is therefore recommended in order to incor- porate total-maximum-load measures for environmental regulatory purposes.

Author(s): 
Marie Magnusson
Pamela Quayle
Kirsten Heimann
Andrew P. Negri
Keywords: 
Herbicide
Great Barrier Reef
Photosynthesis
Pollution
Fluorometry
Article Source: 
Marine Pollution Bulletin 60 (2010) 1978–1987
Category: 
Basic Biology
Ecological Services
Geography