•   Search
  •   Map
  •  Sign in

Toxicity of azo dyes to benthic invertebrates

Azo dyes are synthetic compounds used as industrial colorants, and some are predicted to be inherently toxic, bioaccumulative, and/or persistent based upon their chemical composition. This study addressed data gaps in current research which included the need to evaluate the toxicity of hydrophobic azo dyes to benthic invertebrates. The toxicity of a solvent dye, Sudan Red G (SRG), and two disperse dyes, Disperse Yellow 7 (DY7) and Disperse Orange 13 (DO13), to Hexagenia spp. and Tubifex tubifex was assessed in spiked-sediment exposures. The dye compounds appeared to degrade readily in the equilibrium and exposure periods, suggesting a limited persistence of the parent compounds in the environment under test conditions.Although azo dye degradation products could not be reliably quantified, one was detected in DY7 sediment samples that elicited toxic effects to Hexagenia and Tubifex, providing evidence that DY7 degrades. Hexagenia survival and growth endpoints responded with similar sensitivity to the dyes, but DY7 was the most toxic, with a 21-day IC25 (concentration associated with 25% inhibition) for growth of 9.6 μg/g. Comparatively, Tubifex reproduction was the most sensitive endpoint for all dyes with 28-day IC25s for young production ranging from 1.3 to 11.8 μg/g. At sublethal concentrations, toxic effects to Tubifex differed between dyes: the solvent dye exerted an effect primarily on gametogenesis (cocoon production), while disperse dyes, most notably DY7, caused effects on embryogenesis(development of worm inside the cocoon). This study indicated that there could be potential hazard to oligochaetes based on the observed effect concentrations, but given the lack of environmental measurements, the risk of these compounds is unknown. Further research is required to determine if degradation products were formed in all dye samples and whether toxicity was caused by the parent molecules, which have limited persistence under test conditions, or by their degradation products. To avoid underestimating toxicity, this study stresses the need to use an infaunal deposit feeder such as the oligochaete Tubifex in sediment toxicity assessments where highly hydrophobic compounds are present.

Basic view

Metadata Record Information

File Identifier
7a0a9342-51f2-4b1e-93d9-abd31f5b596c XML
Date Stamp
2022-06-29T16:21:01
Metadata language

eng; CAN

Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy Level
Dataset
Author
  Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada - Environment and Climate Change Canada ( Public inquiries centre)

Fontaine Building 12th floor, 200 Sacré-Coeur Blvd, Gatineau, Quebec, K1A 0H3,
1-800-668-6767

https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change.html
 

Data identification

Title

Toxicity of azo dyes to benthic invertebrates

Date (Creation)
2017-12-10
Date (Publication)
2019-09-18
Status
Completed
Metadata language

eng; CAN

Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Biota
Maintenance and Update Frequency
As needed
Spatial representation type
Text, table
Principal investigator
  Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada - Danielle Milani ( Biologist)

Ontario, Canada

Keywords

Theme
  • toxicity, mayfly, worms, bioassay, benthic, sediment, survival, growth, reproduction

  • Observation/Measurement

  • Chemicals Management Plan, CMP

Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus

  • Toxicology

ECCC Information Category EN

  • Water - Quality

Business Functions

  • Assess Toxicity, Manage and Monitor for Environmental Presence of Hazardous Substances and Waste

  • Assess Toxicity of Substance

Geography

  • Ontario (ON)

external.theme.EC_Branch

  • Science and Technology Branch

external.theme.EC_Directorate

  • Water Science and Technology

external.theme.EC_Program_PAA

  • 1.3.4. Great Lakes

external.theme.GC_Security_Level

  • Unclassified

 
Use Limitation

Open Government Licence - Canada ( http://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada)

Access Constraints
License
Use Constraints
License
Begin Date
2010-04-05
End Date
2016-09-05

Extent

N
S
E
W
thumbnail




 
 

Ref. system Reference Systems

Reference system identifier
http://www.epsg-registry.org / EPSG:3978 /
 

Distribution

Distribution Formats

Distribution format
  • HTML ( unkown)

 
Distributor
  Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada - Environment and Climate Change Canada ( Public inquiries centre)

Fontaine Building 12th floor, 200 Sacré-Coeur Blvd, Gatineau, Quebec, K1A 0H3,
1-800-668-6767

https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change.html
 
 

Overviews

N
S
E
W
thumbnail




Keywords

Chemicals Management Plan, CMP Observation/Measurement toxicity, mayfly, worms, bioassay, benthic, sediment, survival, growth, reproduction
Business Functions

Assess Toxicity of Substance Assess Toxicity, Manage and Monitor for Environmental Presence of Hazardous Substances and Waste
ECCC Information Category EN

Water - Quality
Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus

Toxicology
external.theme.EC_Branch

Science and Technology Branch
external.theme.EC_Directorate

Water Science and Technology
external.theme.EC_Program_PAA

1.3.4. Great Lakes
external.theme.GC_Security_Level

Unclassified


Provided by

logo

Share on social sites

Associated resources

Not available