2 research outputs found
Application of the Target Lipid Model and Passive Samplers to Characterize the Toxicity of Bioavailable Organics in Oil Sands Process-Affected Water
Oil sand operations in Alberta, Canada
will eventually include
returning treated process-affected waters to the environment. Organic
constituents in oil sand process-affected water (OSPW) represent complex
mixtures of nonionic and ionic (e.g., naphthenic acids) compounds,
and compositions can vary spatially and temporally, which has impeded
development of water quality benchmarks. To address this challenge,
it was hypothesized that solid phase microextraction fibers coated
with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) could be used as a biomimetic extraction
(BE) to measure bioavailable organics in OSPW. Organic constituents
of OSPW were assumed to contribute additively to toxicity, and partitioning
to PDMS was assumed to be predictive of accumulation in target lipids,
which were the presumed site of action. This method was tested using
toxicity data for individual model compounds, defined mixtures, and
organic mixtures extracted from OSPW. Toxicity was correlated with
BE data, which supports the use of this method in hazard assessments
of acute lethality to aquatic organisms. A species sensitivity distribution
(SSD), based on target lipid model and BE values, was similar to SSDs
based on residues in tissues for both nonionic and ionic organics.
BE was shown to be an analytical tool that accounts for bioaccumulation
of organic compound mixtures from which toxicity can be predicted,
with the potential to aid in the development of water quality guidelines
Application of the Target Lipid Model and Passive Samplers to Characterize the Toxicity of Bioavailable Organics in Oil Sands Process-Affected Water
Oil sand operations in Alberta, Canada
will eventually include
returning treated process-affected waters to the environment. Organic
constituents in oil sand process-affected water (OSPW) represent complex
mixtures of nonionic and ionic (e.g., naphthenic acids) compounds,
and compositions can vary spatially and temporally, which has impeded
development of water quality benchmarks. To address this challenge,
it was hypothesized that solid phase microextraction fibers coated
with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) could be used as a biomimetic extraction
(BE) to measure bioavailable organics in OSPW. Organic constituents
of OSPW were assumed to contribute additively to toxicity, and partitioning
to PDMS was assumed to be predictive of accumulation in target lipids,
which were the presumed site of action. This method was tested using
toxicity data for individual model compounds, defined mixtures, and
organic mixtures extracted from OSPW. Toxicity was correlated with
BE data, which supports the use of this method in hazard assessments
of acute lethality to aquatic organisms. A species sensitivity distribution
(SSD), based on target lipid model and BE values, was similar to SSDs
based on residues in tissues for both nonionic and ionic organics.
BE was shown to be an analytical tool that accounts for bioaccumulation
of organic compound mixtures from which toxicity can be predicted,
with the potential to aid in the development of water quality guidelines