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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative toxicity of cadmium, zinc, and mixtures of cadmium and zinc to daphnids

TLDR
Collectively, these studies suggest that D. magna may not be representative of other cladocerans and that cadmium and zinc effects presented individually and in combination on Ceriodaphnia dubia, Daphnia magna,Daphnia ambigua, and Daphnian pulex are suggest to be less-than-additive.
Abstract
Investigations were conducted to determine acute (48-h) effects of cadmium and zinc presented individually and in combination on Ceriodaphnia dubia, Daphnia magna, Daphnia ambigua, and Daphnia pulex. Toxicity tests were conducted with single metals to determine lethal effects concentrations (lethal concentrations predicted for a given percent [x] of a population, LCx value). These were used to derive metal combinations that spanned a range of effects and included mixtures of LC15, LC50, and LC85 values calculated for each metal and species. In single-metal tests, 48-h LC50 values ranged from 0.09 to 0.9 micromol/L and 4 to 12.54 micromol/L for cadmium and zinc, respectively. For each metal, D. magna was most tolerant and showed a different pattern of response from all others as determined by slope of concentration-response curves. In the combined metal treatments, all daphnids showed a similar pattern of response when LC15 concentrations were combined. This trend continued with few exceptions when LC15 concentrations of cadmium were combined with LC50 or LC85 values for zinc. However, when this treatment was reversed (LC15, zinc + LC50 or LC85, cadmium), responses of all species except D. magna indicated less-than-additive effects. For C. dubia, a near complete reduction in toxicity was observed when the LC15 for zinc was combined with LC85 for cadmium. Multimetal tests with D. magna did not differ from additive. Collectively, these studies suggest that D. magna may not be representative of other cladocerans.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Toxicity of nanosized and bulk ZnO, CuO and TiO2 to bacteria Vibrio fischeri and crustaceans Daphnia magna and Thamnocephalus platyurus.

TL;DR: This is the first evaluation of ZnO, CuO and TiO2 toxicity to bacteria Vibrio fischeri and crustaceans Daphnia magna and Thamnocephalus platyurus with a special emphasis on product formulations (nano or bulk oxides) and solubilization of particles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantifying the evidence for ecological synergies

TL;DR: It is found that, on average, mortalities from the combined action of two stressors were not synergistic and this result was consistent across studies investigating different stressors, study organisms and life-history stages, suggesting that ecological surprises may be more common than simple additive effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecotoxicity of nanoparticles of CuO and ZnO in natural water.

TL;DR: The natural waters remarkably decreased the toxicity of nanoCuO (but not that of nanoZnO) to crustaceans depending mainly on the concentration of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) or solubilised ions as determined by specific metal-sensing bacteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toxicity of copper, lead, and zinc mixtures to Ceriodaphnia dubia and Daphnia carinata.

TL;DR: A more than additive effect was indicated by the acute tests for both species exposed toCu+Pb, for D. carinata exposed to Cu+Zn, and for C. dubia exposed to all three metals.
Book ChapterDOI

Daphnia as an emerging model for toxicological genomics

TL;DR: Daphnia's unique biological attributes make it ideal for an expansion of research efforts, including a long tradition of ecological, evolutionary and toxicological study, culminating in the benefits provided by emerging genomic tools.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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