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Comparison of Brachionus calyciflorus 2-d and microtox® chronic 22-h tests with Daphnia magna 21-d test for the chronic toxicity assessment of chemicals

✍ Scribed by Pascal Radix; Marc Léonard; Christos Papantoniou; Gilles Roman; Erwan Saouter; Sophie Gallotti—Schmitt; Hervé Thiébaud; Paule Vasseur


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
95 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0730-7268

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The Daphnia magna 21‐d test may be required by European authorities as a criterion for the assessment of aquatic chronic toxicity for the notification of new substances. However, this test has several drawbacks. It is labor—intensive, relatively expensive, and requires the breeding of test organisms. The Brachionous calyciflorus 2‐d test and Microtoxr̀ chronic 22‐h test do not suffer from these disadvantages and could be used as substitutes for the Daphnia 21‐d test for screening assays. During this study, the toxicity of 25 chemicals was measured using both the Microtox chronic toxicity and B. calyciflorus 2‐d tests, and the no—observed‐effect concentrations (NOECs) were compared to the D. magna 21‐d test. The Brachionus test was slightly less sensitive than the Daphnia test, but the correlation between the two tests was relatively good (r^2^ = 0.88). On average, the Microtox chronic test presented the same sensitivity as the Daphnia test, but the results did not correlate as well (r^2^ = 0.54). The B. calyciflorus 2‐d test, and to a lesser extent the Microtox chronic 22‐h test, were able to predict the chronic toxicity values of the Daphnia 21‐d test. They constitute promising cost—effective tools for chronic toxicity screening.