World Bank assisted National Agricultural Research Project (NARP) - University of Port Harcourt
Abstract
This work was undertaken to investigate the dose-time effect of crude
oil and hydro-test effluent on freshwater and brackish water habitats.
The species used for the acute toxicity were freshwater fish, Tilapia
guineenis (fry) and a brackish water shrimp, Palaemonetes africanus.
Test results indicated that the brackish water juvenile shrimps were
more sensitive to the mixture of the hydro-test effluent and crude oil
than the freshwater habitat. This could be attributed to the
physicochemical constituents of the receiving environment. In both the
freshwater and brackish water habitats, the higher the concentration
and longer the exposure of the test species, the higher the mortality
rate. This was evidenced from test result which showed 0% mortality for
100mg/l at 4hrs for both the fresh water and brackish water species
respectively, and 100% mortality at 4hrs for 100,000 mg/l concentration
of the hydro-test effluent and crude oil mixture. The project therefore
has provided a learning tool and a platform in evaluating the
concentrations of the chemical and the duration of exposure required to
produce the criterion effect. Moreover, test results validated the age
long theory that "the most important factor that determines the effect
of any substance is the dose-time relationship. @ JASE