Derivation of Soil Ecological Criteria for Copper in Chinese Soils.

Considerable information on copper (Cu) ecotoxicity as affected by biological species and abiotic properties of soils has been collected from the last decade in the present study. The information on bioavailability/ecotoxicity, species sensitivity and differences in laboratory and field ecotoxicity...

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Main Authors: Xiaoqing Wang, Dongpu Wei, Yibing Ma, Mike J McLaughlin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4514794?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ac7b3976614c49a89dea7ce6888e32102020-11-24T21:55:11ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01107e013394110.1371/journal.pone.0133941Derivation of Soil Ecological Criteria for Copper in Chinese Soils.Xiaoqing WangDongpu WeiYibing MaMike J McLaughlinConsiderable information on copper (Cu) ecotoxicity as affected by biological species and abiotic properties of soils has been collected from the last decade in the present study. The information on bioavailability/ecotoxicity, species sensitivity and differences in laboratory and field ecotoxicity of Cu in different soils was collated and integrated to derive soil ecological criteria for Cu in Chinese soils, which were expressed as predicted no effect concentrations (PNEC). First, all ecotoxicity data of Cu from bioassays based on Chinese soils were collected and screened with given criteria to compile a database. Second, the compiled data were corrected with leaching and aging factors to minimize the differences between laboratory and field conditions. Before Cu ecotoxicity data were entered into a species sensitivity distribution (SSD), they were normalized with Cu ecotoxicity predictive models to modify the effects of soil properties on Cu ecotoxicity. The PNEC value was set equal to the hazardous concentration for x% of the species (HCx), which could be calculated from the SSD curves, without an additional assessment factor. Finally, predictive models for HCx based on soil properties were developed. The soil properties had a significant effect on the magnitude of HCx, with HC5 varying from 13.1 mg/kg in acidic soils to 51.9 mg/kg in alkaline non-calcareous soils. The two-factor predictive models based on soil pH and cation exchange capacity could predict HCx with determination coefficients (R2) of 0.82-0.91. The three-factor predictive models--that took into account the effect of soil organic carbon--were more accurate than two-factor models, with R2 of 0.85-0.99. The predictive models obtained here could be used to calculate soil-specific criteria. All results obtained here could provide a scientific basis for revision of current Chinese soil environmental quality standards, and the approach adopted in this study could be used as a pragmatic framework for developing soil ecological criteria for other trace elements in soils.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4514794?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xiaoqing Wang
Dongpu Wei
Yibing Ma
Mike J McLaughlin
spellingShingle Xiaoqing Wang
Dongpu Wei
Yibing Ma
Mike J McLaughlin
Derivation of Soil Ecological Criteria for Copper in Chinese Soils.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Xiaoqing Wang
Dongpu Wei
Yibing Ma
Mike J McLaughlin
author_sort Xiaoqing Wang
title Derivation of Soil Ecological Criteria for Copper in Chinese Soils.
title_short Derivation of Soil Ecological Criteria for Copper in Chinese Soils.
title_full Derivation of Soil Ecological Criteria for Copper in Chinese Soils.
title_fullStr Derivation of Soil Ecological Criteria for Copper in Chinese Soils.
title_full_unstemmed Derivation of Soil Ecological Criteria for Copper in Chinese Soils.
title_sort derivation of soil ecological criteria for copper in chinese soils.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Considerable information on copper (Cu) ecotoxicity as affected by biological species and abiotic properties of soils has been collected from the last decade in the present study. The information on bioavailability/ecotoxicity, species sensitivity and differences in laboratory and field ecotoxicity of Cu in different soils was collated and integrated to derive soil ecological criteria for Cu in Chinese soils, which were expressed as predicted no effect concentrations (PNEC). First, all ecotoxicity data of Cu from bioassays based on Chinese soils were collected and screened with given criteria to compile a database. Second, the compiled data were corrected with leaching and aging factors to minimize the differences between laboratory and field conditions. Before Cu ecotoxicity data were entered into a species sensitivity distribution (SSD), they were normalized with Cu ecotoxicity predictive models to modify the effects of soil properties on Cu ecotoxicity. The PNEC value was set equal to the hazardous concentration for x% of the species (HCx), which could be calculated from the SSD curves, without an additional assessment factor. Finally, predictive models for HCx based on soil properties were developed. The soil properties had a significant effect on the magnitude of HCx, with HC5 varying from 13.1 mg/kg in acidic soils to 51.9 mg/kg in alkaline non-calcareous soils. The two-factor predictive models based on soil pH and cation exchange capacity could predict HCx with determination coefficients (R2) of 0.82-0.91. The three-factor predictive models--that took into account the effect of soil organic carbon--were more accurate than two-factor models, with R2 of 0.85-0.99. The predictive models obtained here could be used to calculate soil-specific criteria. All results obtained here could provide a scientific basis for revision of current Chinese soil environmental quality standards, and the approach adopted in this study could be used as a pragmatic framework for developing soil ecological criteria for other trace elements in soils.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4514794?pdf=render
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