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Karakterisering af havnesediment ved hjælp af biotest
Usually harbour sediments are contaminated with chemical substances to a larger or
smaller extent dependent on the types of ships frequenting the harbours, the types of
cargo transported via the harbours and the related land-based activities. The contaminants
may directly affect the sediment fauna as harbour sediment has proven often to be acutely
toxic to sediment-living organisms. Moreover, contaminants may to some extent leach to the
pelagial water both by resuspension of the sediment as the result of the water current
conditions and navigation activities and by dredging and subsequent dumping in the sea.
This may result in also pelagic organisms being at risk of exposure and toxic effects.
In this project, an assessment of ecotoxicological test methods for the examination of
the toxicity of contaminated harbour sediments was made. It was evaluated whether the
methods were suitable for characterising the content of environmental pollutants in the
sediments and for assessment of potential effects in connection with the handling and
dredging and dumping of sediments. Three different methods were selected and tried out for
test of sediments (tests with amphipods, mussels and brittle stars, respectively) and
three methods for test of sediment extracts (copepods, planktonic algae and bacteria (the
Microtox test system)). The methods were tested in tests of sediments from four stations
(Copenhagen, Odense and Horsens harbours and one reference station from the open waters).
Tests were performed of both sediments and sediment extracts so that dredging and dumping
of sediment were simulated.
The applied tests for survival are relatively insensitive to the partly heavily
polluted sediments while effects on behaviour are registered to a greater extent. On the
basis of the short-term tests and assessments made, a test strategy can be proposed
including potential methods for characterisation of contaminated harbour sediments. At the
drawing-up of the test strategy, it was taken into account that the test results do not
necessarily have to directly reflect the analytically determined concentrations of
chemical substances as ecotoxicological test of sediments or their extracts should be
regarded as a supplement to chemical analyses. By such a supplement, a more graduated
picture may be achieved of the level of contamination of the sediments than can be
achieved by performing only chemical analyses or ecotoxicological tests. On the face of
it, the costs of biological testing of a sediment sample will be in approximately the same
order as the costs of carrying out an exhaustive chemical analysis programme.
In this study, no attempts have been made to prioritise the different test methods as
the actual application should reflect the purpose of the testing and as some of the
methods require further development and standardisation. The following methods are
recommended:
 | Test of sediments: Brittle stars (Ophiura albida) are considered sensitive to
contaminants in sediments and probably very sensitive to antifouling biocides |
 | Test of sediments: The amphipod (Corophium volutator) is the most sensitive
species as regards lethal effects |
 | Test of extracts: Planktonic algae (Skeletonema costatum) or crustaceans (Acartia
tonsa) will presumably be applicable in tests of extracts of contaminated sediment. |
The results of the ecotoxicological tests were compared with the content of chemical
substances (in both sediments and sediment extracts), which had been determined by
chemical analysis. As a measure of the environmental impact, the total risk quotient (RQ)
was calculated for each sample. The risk quotient is defined as the ratio of the measured
concentration to the sediment quality standard for each individual substance and is summed
up for all the measured substances. If a total risk quotient exceeds 1, theoretical risks
of ecotoxic effects will exist.
By comparing the calculated risk quotients with the measured effects, it is obvious
that there is a large gap between the level of contamination, at which risks of ecotoxic
effects may be assumed (i.e., RQ > 1), and the level of contamination, at which effects
are measured in biological short-term tests. Acute mortality can only be measured at RQ ³ 7-10,000 while behavioural effects are measurable at RQ = 3,000
with the test methods applied in this study.
This difference can be explained by various facts, i.e., on the one hand that the
chemical substances sorb to the sediment content of organic matter and particles thereby
limiting the bioavailability and that the total effect of the chemical substances in
combination is less than the sum of the effects of the individual substances, and on the
other that the applied short-term tests are not sufficiently sensitive to measure ecotoxic
effects.
It is estimated that the real effect limit measured by RQ will be somewhere in the
interval <100-1,000 but it has not been possible on the basis of the tests performed in
this study to make a closer estimate. It thus appears that on the basis of only chemical
analyses, it is not possible to lay down a limit for the level at which ecotoxic effects
can be expected. Nor is it, however, possible to lay down such a limit on the basis of the
biotest methods tested in this study. It would be conservative to choose the results from
chemical analyses combined with sediment quality standards as a starting point but such a
basis for a regulation would probably not be realistic as practically all harbour
sediments would then be considered as environmentally hazardous. Therefore, there will be
a need for further method development within both bioavailability and sublethal or chronic
biotesting with sediment-living species before limits for the environmental hazard of
contaminated sediments can be established.
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