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Validating species sensitivity distributions using salinity tolerance of riverine macroinvertebrates in the southern Murray-Darling basin (Victoria, Australia)

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 02:47 authored by Benjamin Kefford, Dayanthi NugegodaDayanthi Nugegoda, Leon Metzeling, Elizabeth Fields
Species sensitivity distributions (SSDs) are commonly used in risk assessment and in setting water quality guidelines, yet their predictions have not been validated against loss of species with increasing pollutant concentrations in nature. We used a rapid toxicity testing method to determine the acute salinity tolerance (72 h LC50 values (concentration of salinity lethal to 50% of individuals)) of 110 macroinvertebrate taxa from the southern Murray-Darling Basin in central Victoria, Australia, and construct an SSD. This SSD was compared with loss of riverine macro invertebrates species from increasing salinity in Victoria. Macroinvertebrate species richness per individual sample, when salinity was < 9.9 mS center dot cm(-1), was invariant of salinity. However, when species richness was calculated across multiple samples above about 0.3-0.5 mS center dot cm(-1), it declined with increasing salinity. This decline was predicted from the SSD after application of a variable safety factor calculated from an exponential or quadratic equation. Our findings confirm that SSDs can predict the loss of freshwater macroinvertebrate species from increases in salinity. This suggests that SSDs may be useful more generally for other aquatic organisms, other stressors, and toxicants.

History

Journal

Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences

Volume

63

Issue

8

Start page

1865

End page

1877

Total pages

13

Publisher

National Research Council Canada

Place published

Ottawa, Canada

Language

English

Copyright

© 2006 NRC Canada

Former Identifier

2006000374

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-02-27